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Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on January 01, 2022, 06:51:35 pmQuote from: WheatleyRover on January 01, 2022, 05:35:56 pmHow many people died of something else that had a positive covid result and it went down as a Covid death? The figures are incorrect.Every single week the ONS release figures breaking the headline numbers into cases where COVID was considered the primary cause of death and cases where COVID was incidental.Go look it up. Bullshit data like I said.
Quote from: WheatleyRover on January 01, 2022, 05:35:56 pmHow many people died of something else that had a positive covid result and it went down as a Covid death? The figures are incorrect.Every single week the ONS release figures breaking the headline numbers into cases where COVID was considered the primary cause of death and cases where COVID was incidental.Go look it up.
How many people died of something else that had a positive covid result and it went down as a Covid death? The figures are incorrect.
Been feeling dodgy since last night.Streaming cold, headache, chills.Did two LFT's both positive.Airport tomorrow for PCR.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jan/01/us-covid-case-counts-omicron
Vitamin D supplement TT. Good for the immune system, particularly in these dark winter days. And plenty of vitamin C is good too.
Quote from: River Don on January 01, 2022, 11:04:06 pmVitamin D supplement TT. Good for the immune system, particularly in these dark winter days. And plenty of vitamin C is good too. And Zinc.
Face masks to be worn in class rooms by secondary school pupils as well
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-59848109The bleeding obvious that some have been pointing out since the start of this crisis. If you don't control this virus, it locks down your economy for you. Anybody work in an job where the bosses keep a spare 25% of capacity for moments like these?
When we have a chance to properly look back at who performed a service to the nation in this crisis, the BBC deserves a savaging.It employs people to inform us about health issues.They've just put this graphic up on their website https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cpsprodpb/DD9F/production/_122553765_hospital_cases_uk_31dec-nc.png"Nearly 12000 people in hospital with COVID" it says. Doesn't look like too big an increase does it? Maybe there's no reason for concern.Then the small print. "Most recent data for all nations is from 29 December".So they are showing 4 day old data in a rapidly changing scenario.But there IS additional data out there. The data on total number of patients in hospital with COVID in England alone has been published right up to today. And currently it stands at over 13,000. There's a delay in data from the other UK nations but if you factor in what they are likely to be, it's likely that the total UK hospital cases is now top side of 15,000. That's double what it was the week before Xmas.And because hospital cases lag infections by 3 or so weeks, those total hospital cases are going to go MUCH higher. The BBC journalists could easily have given an estimate of where we now are and properly inform people. It took me 20 seconds to find the numbers.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on January 02, 2022, 07:37:51 pmWhen we have a chance to properly look back at who performed a service to the nation in this crisis, the BBC deserves a savaging.It employs people to inform us about health issues.They've just put this graphic up on their website https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cpsprodpb/DD9F/production/_122553765_hospital_cases_uk_31dec-nc.png"Nearly 12000 people in hospital with COVID" it says. Doesn't look like too big an increase does it? Maybe there's no reason for concern.Then the small print. "Most recent data for all nations is from 29 December".So they are showing 4 day old data in a rapidly changing scenario.But there IS additional data out there. The data on total number of patients in hospital with COVID in England alone has been published right up to today. And currently it stands at over 13,000. There's a delay in data from the other UK nations but if you factor in what they are likely to be, it's likely that the total UK hospital cases is now top side of 15,000. That's double what it was the week before Xmas.And because hospital cases lag infections by 3 or so weeks, those total hospital cases are going to go MUCH higher. The BBC journalists could easily have given an estimate of where we now are and properly inform people. It took me 20 seconds to find the numbers. Just before anyone else jumps on this. What Billy’s link doesn’t show is that this graphic hasn’t just been put up, it was put up on 31st December:https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-51768274And it’s hardly small print.Billy - you are becoming more embarrassing by each post.
The point is Bpool, there's no choice between lockdown or no lockdown.The choice is between an orderly, planned lockdown or a chaotic, unplanned one.You tell me how the economy, schools and hospitals work if 25% of staff are off ill at the same time? There will be mass, disorderly shutdowns. Last night we already had the first NHS trust call a Level 4 Critical Incident because of staff shortages. And we are nowhere near the peak.This is why I was so despairing of the BBC last night publishing that 4 day out of date data in an article slavishly headed "Nothing in data supports new curbs - ministers".What the BBC has become is a mouthpiece for Govt announcements that are presented without criticism or proper analysis. January is going to be f**king awful, but the BBC article last night did nothing to prepare people for that, or to question WHY a Govt that has just told us to "plan for" up to 25% staff absences is also saying that there's no reason not to just carry on.