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RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 9:02:18 PM   
MakeeLearn


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Sammy5IsAlive


quote:

ORIGINAL: MakeeLearn

Jupiter, Saturn, Mars, and Moon to line up before sunrise this weekend


On Saturday morning, look to the east-southeast between 5 a.m. and about 30 minutes before sunrise(EST). In the coming days, the warning crescent moon will thin into a slender sickle, vanishing entirely as a “new moon” arrives Tuesday night.





Where is that photo taken from?! It's incredible. We've had Venus really bright recently - don't know if that is because of a reduction in air pollution or just a normal astronomical phase.




The moon, Mars, Saturn, and Jupiter visible near Tehran, Iran on Friday morning, April 17. (Taha Ghouchkanlu via SpaceWeather.com)

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/jupiter-saturn-mars-and-moon-to-line-up-before-sunrise-this-weekend/ar-BB12NAT7?li=BBnb7Kz








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Post #: 5101
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 9:03:54 PM   
Encircled


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Another Johnson cheerleading paper reporting that oxygen supplies are being rationed.

We are in big trouble over here because the government has been used to be able to blame somebody else for stuff going wrong.

They are finding out that doesn't work with real stuff like this.

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Post #: 5102
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 9:12:03 PM   
Sammy5IsAlive

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: obvert

quote:

ORIGINAL: MakeeLearn

France finds more than 1,000 coronavirus cases on aircraft carrier
Today


https://www.staradvertiser.com/2020/04/17/breaking-news/france-finds-more-than-1000-coronavirus-cases-on-aircraft-carrier/



"PARIS >> The French navy is investigating how the coronavirus infected more than 1,000 sailors aboard the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle, amid growing pressure on government leaders to explain how it could have happened.

The ship, France’s biggest carrier and the flagship of its navy, is undergoing a lengthy disinfection process since returning to its home base in Toulon five days ago.

One person remains in intensive care and some 20 others hospitalized, navy spokesman Cmdr. Eric Lavault told The Associated Press."


Ships seem to be supplying a good look at what this virus will do in closed communities without social distancing in place.

Defense Minister Florence Parly told lawmakers that 1,081 of the 2,300 people aboard the Charles de Gaulle and its escort vessels have tested positive so far — nearly half the overall personnel.

The defense minister defended the decision to allow the ship to stop in Brest in mid-March, even though France had already ordered all schools closed to fight the virus and the government was preparing confinement measures. Hours after the ship left, President Emmanuel Macron announced a nationwide lockdown, among the strictest in Europe.


In a span of probably 3-4 weeks about half of the crew were infected and have been tested as positive. As above, it looks like the young crew are doing better than the demographic on cruise ships, with only one removed to ICU, and twenty others bad enough for admission to a hospital from 1,081.

In virtually every country it's been moving through the same must be true in the first weeks of exposure. So how many have really been exposed, infected and didn't even know it?

If we're going (mostly) by cases severe enough to have symptoms, then allowed to be tested, actual numbers may be much, much higher than we're looking at every day. I'm starting to wonder if that Oxford study might have more to it than it seemed.


I'm not sure to be honest. 2% of a young and healthy crew required hospitalisation. Scaled up to London's population of 9M that would equate to 180,000 hospital admissions.

So I don't think there is a direct analogy to suggest that 50% of London has been infected.

I do think some of the figures from this, the Diamond Princess and the testing they did in Iceland are encouraging though in suggesting that we might be looking more at 'light' lockdowns/social distancing measures moving forward rather than a back and forth between lifting and imposing of 'full' lockdown measures.

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Post #: 5103
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 9:18:57 PM   
Sammy5IsAlive

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Encircled

Another Johnson cheerleading paper reporting that oxygen supplies are being rationed.

We are in big trouble over here because the government has been used to be able to blame somebody else for stuff going wrong.

They are finding out that doesn't work with real stuff like this.


It's becoming increasingly farcical over here isn't it. Nobody seems willing to make any decisions or take responsibility for fear that they will be the fall guy once Johnson is back.

If Johnson is out of the picture for the foreseeable I think we are getting into 'government of national unity' territory. Potentially with Starmer as the guy at the top but with a Tory cabinet below him. So we can actually get on with doing stuff and give all the politicians the leg-room to blame the other guy if things don't go to plan.

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Post #: 5104
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 9:23:15 PM   
Cap Mandrake


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OXYGEN being rationed.

Can't you just buy some from the French? You can drive the stuff around in big cryogenic trucks.

< Message edited by Cap Mandrake -- 4/17/2020 9:29:26 PM >

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Post #: 5105
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 9:26:14 PM   
Encircled


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Sammy5IsAlive


quote:

ORIGINAL: Encircled

Another Johnson cheerleading paper reporting that oxygen supplies are being rationed.

We are in big trouble over here because the government has been used to be able to blame somebody else for stuff going wrong.

They are finding out that doesn't work with real stuff like this.


It's becoming increasingly farcical over here isn't it. Nobody seems willing to make any decisions or take responsibility for fear that they will be the fall guy once Johnson is back.

If Johnson is out of the picture for the foreseeable I think we are getting into 'government of national unity' territory. Potentially with Starmer as the guy at the top but with a Tory cabinet below him. So we can actually get on with doing stuff and give all the politicians the leg-room to blame the other guy if things don't go to plan.


Makes sense, which is exactly why the UK in its current state won't do it.

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Post #: 5106
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 9:27:55 PM   
Encircled


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Cap Mandrake

OXYGEN being rationed.


I used to work in NHS procurement before my current role.

That was about eight years ago, and the cuts where just biting then and it was being run on at absolute shoestring.

Eight years on, and eight years of cuts, and this is kinda the worst case scenario, and its no wonder we are struggling.

Link

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/04/17/exclusive-nhs-rationing-oxygen-doctors-instructed-downgrade/?utm_content=telegraph&utm_medium=Social&utm_campaign=Echobox&utm_source=Twitter#Echobox=1587156025

< Message edited by Encircled -- 4/17/2020 9:28:31 PM >


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Post #: 5107
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 9:35:00 PM   
Cap Mandrake


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Just buy some from the French. The can ship it cryogenic trucks. Sure,they might want money but just borrow it. That's what we do.

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Post #: 5108
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 9:37:04 PM   
Cap Mandrake


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Every hospital needs at least one big cryogenic O2 tank in case there are disrutptions to the supply chains. Usually you have a safety manager or something that makes sure the damn thing is full

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Post #: 5109
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 9:38:40 PM   
Cap Mandrake


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Some patients needing under 5 or 6 LPM can by with a portable concentrator

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Post #: 5110
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 9:42:32 PM   
Sammy5IsAlive

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Cap Mandrake

Just buy some from the French. The can ship it cryogenic trucks. Sure,they might want money but just borrow it. That's what we do.


My understanding of the situation is that we have plenty of oxygen itself but the delivery systems are substandard. There was a report a few days ago suggesting that if the delivery systems being used hit capacity they wouldn't switch to providing less oxygen across the board but would start shutting down entirely without warning. This article is from 10 days ago - https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/coronavirus-uk-oxygen-hospitals-nhs-cases-a9451751.html

Grim stuff

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Post #: 5111
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 9:42:51 PM   
Encircled


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Change of plan!

Next post!

< Message edited by Encircled -- 4/17/2020 9:43:35 PM >


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Post #: 5112
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 9:46:06 PM   
Encircled


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From: Northern England
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Sammy5IsAlive


quote:

ORIGINAL: Cap Mandrake

Just buy some from the French. The can ship it cryogenic trucks. Sure,they might want money but just borrow it. That's what we do.


My understanding of the situation is that we have plenty of oxygen itself but the delivery systems are substandard. There was a report a few days ago suggesting that if the delivery systems being used hit capacity they wouldn't switch to providing less oxygen across the board but would start shutting down entirely without warning. This article is from 10 days ago - https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/coronavirus-uk-oxygen-hospitals-nhs-cases-a9451751.html

Grim stuff


Christ, I'd never even heard about that.

For the telegraph to printing it shows how badly its getting though.

Its actually a bit of relief that its the delivery system, as there won't be a shortage of portable oxygen and tanks one would think.

Still bad though.

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Post #: 5113
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 9:49:53 PM   
Sammy5IsAlive

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Encircled


quote:

ORIGINAL: Sammy5IsAlive


quote:

ORIGINAL: Cap Mandrake

Just buy some from the French. The can ship it cryogenic trucks. Sure,they might want money but just borrow it. That's what we do.


My understanding of the situation is that we have plenty of oxygen itself but the delivery systems are substandard. There was a report a few days ago suggesting that if the delivery systems being used hit capacity they wouldn't switch to providing less oxygen across the board but would start shutting down entirely without warning. This article is from 10 days ago - https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/coronavirus-uk-oxygen-hospitals-nhs-cases-a9451751.html

Grim stuff


Christ, I'd never even heard about that.

For the telegraph to printing it shows how badly its getting though.

Its actually a bit of relief that its the delivery system, as there won't be a shortage of portable oxygen and tanks one would think.

Still bad though.


I'm sure we've got a contingency supply of portable oxygen just like everything else

< Message edited by Sammy5IsAlive -- 4/17/2020 9:50:40 PM >

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Post #: 5114
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 9:58:12 PM   
RangerJoe


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Cap Mandrake

Everyone is already walking in my neighborhood. One of the neighbors is even practicing social distancing by bagging up the dog **** and throwing it over my fence. While I am doing telehealth visits I watch to see who has blue dog **** bags and who is carrying one on the way back up the street. This incentive is helping to maintain my mental health.

I drive through Irvine on the way to work. The whole city is out exercising. It's amazing. City and County and State parks and beaches are closed and they police them. You could easily drive 100 mph on the freeways if you are willing to risk a ticket. There is very little traffic. Mostly trucks


Cap, take some melted grease and cover up the **** and then throw it back over the fence. The dogs will enjoy it. Hopefully in the comfort of their homes.

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Post #: 5115
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 10:01:03 PM   
RangerJoe


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quote:

ORIGINAL: RFalvo69


quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

[In reply to RFalvo:]
[...snip...]
This is the third time a forumite has raised the "additional deaths" argument against those he disagrees with. That's....well, any word inserted is too charged. Put it this way - it's a loathsome way to try and make points, suggesting that others favor or are responsible for or will cause deaths.

I'll address this, because I think that it is an important point.

I disagree that this approach is "loathsome".

This virus is putting all of us in a very unique situation: we all could become a loaded gun; a gun that "shoots" when it wants, not us.

OK, I'll look inside my country only. As I told (dozens of pages ago) when Lombardy declared the quarantine scores of people "escaped" to Southern Italy. Right on cue, after the average incubation period, cases in S.Italy spiked. This is on those people.

Then me. A few days ago I suffered from a mild case of hay fever: mild running nose, coughing, red eyes and a mild fever, for two days.

Now, rationally I knew that it was my usual hay fever... possibly. Truth was: "What if this is CODIV19?" And I didn't thought about me. I thought about my daughter, about her boyfriend, about her boyfriend's parents... and so on.

Like it or not, we all are now a potential viral scatter gun. You want to kill yourself? Fine. But don't involve others in this decision.

And all of this is new: a new way for suffering and death to happen. It doesn't cancel the others. But, by not denying this, at least we can do something about this.

But, wait... let's pull back a bit and examine this "more people die under a bus than from Coronavirus" sentence that it is being passed around like a magic formula. Let's try to look at it from a different perspective.

You are the bus driver.

You took an exam. You have procedures to follow. If you act recklessly you will cause for more people to suffer and die.

... you will cause for more people to suffer and die. On top of all other reasons.

There is a reason as why they nail you if you are DUIing.

Sorry, but this is how I see it. Men always fought (*) to reduce causes of death. Now there is a new one. What we can do? I'm open to suggestions, ideas and even criticism (as long as it is factual and constructive). I'm not open to consider our attitudes towards Coronavirus "political" or "too charged words to consider". We.Can.Act.

Give me graphs but also give me ideas. Ideas based on the hard facts, and actions based to these, not to vague "beliefs" born in another era, because the current one is unprecedented. The faster we recognise this, the sooner we will be across. Then we will think about the other bridges.

(*) Yes, I'm aware of the implicit irony.


Hasn't Italy, especially Northern Italy, have had problems with influenza outbreaks overwhelming the healthcare system?

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Post #: 5116
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 10:19:55 PM   
Cap Mandrake


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I don't think you can even run most vents on an O2 tank. A portable anesthesia machine, yes, briefly.

An E tank, about 3 feet tall will only do 5 LPM for about 4 hrs as I recall.

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Post #: 5117
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 10:20:57 PM   
Sammy5IsAlive

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: RangerJoe




Hasn't Italy, especially Northern Italy, have had problems with influenza outbreaks overwhelming the healthcare system?


I think that, with the exception of Germany and the Scandinavian countries, Western European health systems are run on a 'just in time' basis. So they are all vulnerable to spikes in demand - whether it be from a particularly bad flu season or from something like the 2003 heatwave which caused c.35,000 deaths in Europe.

The idea in theory is that if something exceptional happens central government funnels money in to give a short term fix. That's why the Washington projections for the UK went from 60k deaths to 20k deaths - we basically threw a whole load of money and logistics into massively increasing our ICU capacity temporarily.

< Message edited by Sammy5IsAlive -- 4/17/2020 10:23:11 PM >

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Post #: 5118
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 10:22:46 PM   
MakeeLearn


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Just a visual of US uneployment...?




Attachment (1)

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RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 10:30:40 PM   
Chickenboy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Cap Mandrake

Some patients needing under 5 or 6 LPM can by with a portable concentrator


Dad had one for years-it was a Godsend for him. Towards the end he had his modest sized one replaced with one that was as big as a dorm room minifridge. That could get him up to 10 LPM, IIRC. It also trebled their electrical bill for the house. Sucker used a lot of electricity.

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RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 10:30:46 PM   
MakeeLearn


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Nomad

An article with an interesting conclusion. https://townhall.com/columnists/marinamedvin/2020/04/15/israeli-professor-shows-virus-follows-fixed-pattern-n2566915

quote:




"“Is the coronavirus expansion exponential? The answer by the numbers is simple: no. Expansion begins exponentially but fades quickly after about eight weeks,” Professor Yitzhak Ben Israel concluded. The reason why coronavirus follows a fixed pattern is yet unknown. "I have no explanation,” he told Mako, “There are is kinds of speculation: maybe it's climate-related, maybe the virus has its own life cycle.” "


Interesting article. I've seen no comments on it.



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Post #: 5121
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 10:30:55 PM   
Cap Mandrake


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Sammy5IsAlive

quote:

ORIGINAL: RangerJoe




Hasn't Italy, especially Northern Italy, have had problems with influenza outbreaks overwhelming the healthcare system?


I think that, with the exception of Germany and the Scandinavian countries, Western European health systems are run on a 'just in time' basis. So they are all vulnerable to spikes in demand - whether it be from a particularly bad flu season or from something like the 2003 heatwave which caused c.35,000 deaths in Europe.

The idea in theory is that if something exceptional happens central government funnels money in to give a short term fix. That's why the Washington projections for the UK went from 60k deaths to 20k deaths - we basically threw a whole load of money and logistics into massively increasing our ICU capacity temporarily.


The Japanese "just in time" system works for automobile manufacturing when you can predict how many Toyota Camry red leather seats you need. It does not work for needed maintenance or upgrades on health care infrastructure which might takes months to install or custom build. It also does not work for vents or PPE when everyone in the world is trying to buy the stuff at the same time.

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Post #: 5122
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 10:38:02 PM   
Cap Mandrake


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quote:

ORIGINAL: MakeeLearn


quote:

ORIGINAL: Nomad

An article with an interesting conclusion. https://townhall.com/columnists/marinamedvin/2020/04/15/israeli-professor-shows-virus-follows-fixed-pattern-n2566915

quote:




"“Is the coronavirus expansion exponential? The answer by the numbers is simple: no. Expansion begins exponentially but fades quickly after about eight weeks,” Professor Yitzhak Ben Israel concluded. The reason why coronavirus follows a fixed pattern is yet unknown. "I have no explanation,” he told Mako, “There are is kinds of speculation: maybe it's climate-related, maybe the virus has its own life cycle.” "


Interesting article. I've seen no comments on it.





Yes, quite interesting. It behaves like herd immunity kicking in but it doesn't seem like we have enough immune individuals to account for that. It makes me wonder if existing endemic coronaviruses might confer immunity to a portion of the population.


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Post #: 5123
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 10:40:45 PM   
Sammy5IsAlive

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: MakeeLearn

Just a visual of US uneployment...?





That's unemployment insurance claims though? Is that something that is run by the government or through private insurance? Either way it represents people who have been in stable employment for long enough to be entitled to claim - exactly the demographic that would be worst hit by a sudden heavy change in circumstances like we have now.

In terms of pure unemployment both the US and UK have been gradually tracking down from c. 8% towards the end of 2011 to c.3.5% in late 2019. The OBR forecasts we had for a situation where we had to stay in lockdown into summer had unemployment going up to 10% in the UK.

Going of the same forecasts the thing to look at is not unemployment but reduction in GDP - they were forecasting a drop of 35% which would be a far bigger retraction than any of the recessions of living memory (and worse than the retraction that followed the Spanish Flu epidemic)

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Post #: 5124
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 10:46:23 PM   
Sammy5IsAlive

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Cap Mandrake


quote:

ORIGINAL: Sammy5IsAlive

quote:

ORIGINAL: RangerJoe




Hasn't Italy, especially Northern Italy, have had problems with influenza outbreaks overwhelming the healthcare system?


I think that, with the exception of Germany and the Scandinavian countries, Western European health systems are run on a 'just in time' basis. So they are all vulnerable to spikes in demand - whether it be from a particularly bad flu season or from something like the 2003 heatwave which caused c.35,000 deaths in Europe.

The idea in theory is that if something exceptional happens central government funnels money in to give a short term fix. That's why the Washington projections for the UK went from 60k deaths to 20k deaths - we basically threw a whole load of money and logistics into massively increasing our ICU capacity temporarily.


The Japanese "just in time" system works for automobile manufacturing when you can predict how many Toyota Camry red leather seats you need. It does not work for needed maintenance or upgrades on health care infrastructure which might takes months to install or custom build. It also does not work for vents or PPE when everyone in the world is trying to buy the stuff at the same time.



I don't disagree. From a UK perspective we have tried to have the best of both worlds for too long. If you want a universal health service that is effective all of the time and doesn't rely on government bailouts you have to pay for it like they do in Germany or Scandinavia.

As it is I think that the money that has been thrown into the UK health service has just about done the job. Going off those Washington predictions we have 'just in timed' it soon enough to save c.40,000 lives. The problem will come further down the line when the government comes asking the public to pay the bill as they did here after the 2008 financial crash.

< Message edited by Sammy5IsAlive -- 4/17/2020 10:48:43 PM >

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Post #: 5125
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 11:11:28 PM   
RFalvo69


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quote:

ORIGINAL: RangerJoe
Hasn't Italy, especially Northern Italy, have had problems with influenza outbreaks overwhelming the healthcare system?


Not that I'm aware of. Nothing that made the big news, like an emergency, AFAIK.

Italy usually has 2,500,000-3,000,000 flu cases every year, starting in late october and peaking in mid-January. Northern Italy has always more cases than the Mid-South, but it is also more populate and people travel more.

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Post #: 5126
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 11:25:25 PM   
Sammy5IsAlive

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: MakeeLearn


quote:

ORIGINAL: Nomad

An article with an interesting conclusion. https://townhall.com/columnists/marinamedvin/2020/04/15/israeli-professor-shows-virus-follows-fixed-pattern-n2566915

quote:




"“Is the coronavirus expansion exponential? The answer by the numbers is simple: no. Expansion begins exponentially but fades quickly after about eight weeks,” Professor Yitzhak Ben Israel concluded. The reason why coronavirus follows a fixed pattern is yet unknown. "I have no explanation,” he told Mako, “There are is kinds of speculation: maybe it's climate-related, maybe the virus has its own life cycle.” "


Interesting article. I've seen no comments on it.




For me the problem is that there is no true 'control' population. As far as I am aware the only country that has pretty much said we are going to do nothing is Belarus. Everybody else has taken measures to a lesser or greater extent. I'd suggest that even where the 'official' measures have been less than the norm either in terms of speed or extent of implementation the wider public in those countries have been ahead of the 'political curve' in terms of protecting themselves.

The comparision with those Imperial College predictions is misleading I think - they were predictions of possible mortality if little or no social distancing measures were put in place. Once everybody locked down those predictions would inevitably be way off the mark.

I didn't realise that Professor Ferguson had got it so wrong with BSE/CJD - that was definitely a major goof-up on his part.

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Post #: 5127
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 11:31:42 PM   
Sammy5IsAlive

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: RFalvo69


quote:

ORIGINAL: RangerJoe
Hasn't Italy, especially Northern Italy, have had problems with influenza outbreaks overwhelming the healthcare system?


Not that I'm aware of. Nothing that made the big news, like an emergency, AFAIK.

Italy usually has 2,500,000-3,000,000 flu cases every year, starting in late october and peaking in mid-January. Northern Italy has always more cases than the Mid-South, but it is also more populate and people travel more.


It's a long way back in this thread now but I remember looking at comparative deaths/1000 people for influenza/pneumonia and Italy and Spain I think were the 2nd and 3rd highest in the world (can't remember which way round). At that time I discounted the link because #1 by a fair way was Japan who have been doing very well compared to elsewhere.

Let me know if you want me to dig up the link - it'll take a fair bit of internet history 'archaeology'!

(in reply to RFalvo69)
Post #: 5128
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/17/2020 11:58:42 PM   
RFalvo69


Posts: 1380
Joined: 7/11/2013
From: Lamezia Terme (Italy)
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Sammy5IsAlive


quote:

ORIGINAL: RFalvo69


quote:

ORIGINAL: RangerJoe
Hasn't Italy, especially Northern Italy, have had problems with influenza outbreaks overwhelming the healthcare system?


Not that I'm aware of. Nothing that made the big news, like an emergency, AFAIK.

Italy usually has 2,500,000-3,000,000 flu cases every year, starting in late october and peaking in mid-January. Northern Italy has always more cases than the Mid-South, but it is also more populate and people travel more.


It's a long way back in this thread now but I remember looking at comparative deaths/1000 people for influenza/pneumonia and Italy and Spain I think were the 2nd and 3rd highest in the world (can't remember which way round). At that time I discounted the link because #1 by a fair way was Japan who have been doing very well compared to elsewhere.

Let me know if you want me to dig up the link - it'll take a fair bit of internet history 'archaeology'!


No, I believe you

Remember: generally speaking, Italy suffers from an aging population (the second after Japan) amid other factors, so "sick people and deaths by flu" are statistically higher.

What I guess is that this anomaly - being known by Italy's health officials - is already factored in the healthcare budget and planning. The only real scare I remember was SARS in 2003.

I looked at this year's data ("normal flu", no Coronavirus cases): form mid-October to mid-January Italy had 2,768,000 cases. This didn't cause problems to the healthcare infrastructure. The deaths were 240. My data is from mid-January, so the total tally could be higher, but not by much. After this date I fear that the numbers could have become muddled - because the COVID19 emergency really exploded out of nowhere and there was a lot of chaos in classify what was what during those first days...

< Message edited by RFalvo69 -- 4/17/2020 11:59:43 PM >


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(in reply to Sammy5IsAlive)
Post #: 5129
RE: OT: Corona virus - 4/18/2020 12:19:07 AM   
Sammy5IsAlive

 

Posts: 514
Joined: 8/4/2014
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: RFalvo69

quote:

ORIGINAL: Sammy5IsAlive


quote:

ORIGINAL: RFalvo69


quote:

ORIGINAL: RangerJoe
Hasn't Italy, especially Northern Italy, have had problems with influenza outbreaks overwhelming the healthcare system?


Not that I'm aware of. Nothing that made the big news, like an emergency, AFAIK.

Italy usually has 2,500,000-3,000,000 flu cases every year, starting in late october and peaking in mid-January. Northern Italy has always more cases than the Mid-South, but it is also more populate and people travel more.


It's a long way back in this thread now but I remember looking at comparative deaths/1000 people for influenza/pneumonia and Italy and Spain I think were the 2nd and 3rd highest in the world (can't remember which way round). At that time I discounted the link because #1 by a fair way was Japan who have been doing very well compared to elsewhere.

Let me know if you want me to dig up the link - it'll take a fair bit of internet history 'archaeology'!


because the COVID19 emergency really exploded out of nowhere and there was a lot of chaos in classify what was what during those first days...


Just picking up on this - Italy deserves a huge amount of credit for how they/you have dealt with this. As far as I can tell you have kept cases and certainly deaths below the equivalents that are being seen in Spain/France/UK. You've managed that without any of the warning that we had having the benefit of looking at what you were dealing with.

(in reply to RFalvo69)
Post #: 5130
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