You’ve gone from trying to claim the deaths at home are mainly covid, to now basically saying they don’t matter.
These are only the people have died so far, doesn’t even take into consideration of those that have missed cancer treatments/diagnoses.
Will you please stop banging on about missed cancer treatments, this is not a metric for measuring how successful or bad the response to Covid has been...
It is undeniable that had we not had a lockdown the death figures from Covid would have been a lot higher and the currently unexplained excess deaths even higher.
PS please show me where I have said the majority of the excess deaths were Covid related? I have consistently asked questions as to what exactly the cause of deaths have been, but no-one seems to know!
in the past 6 months or generally? nothing new that GPs generally hold their role as gatekeeper to healthcare very seriously, keeping the slightly ill out of the system. the whole notion of having "your" GP is archaic idea. we keep talking about covid changing working practice, lets hope also brings change to this part of healthcare too. (it wont).
see also dentists.
From what I have heard anecdotally from relatives and others there does seem to be a problem getting an appointment with a GP at the moment. This has puzzled me from the start as anyone with Covid-19 is told to stay at home unless it gets bad enough to need hospital treatment, both of which bypass GPs. If this has an impact on more people dying at home I don't know but it probably doesn't help.
However if people are scared to get medical treatment because of Covid-19 then the only way to solve the problem is get Covid-19 under control so people have more confidence. There seems to be some inference with some that if we just start under playing the possible effects of the virus everyone will relax and go and seek medical treatment if they need it. Problem is if we do this infections will rise and there will be more reason to fear the virus and stay at home.
If hospitals get overrun there will be many more people dying at home.
These are only the people have died so far, doesn’t even take into consideration of those that have missed cancer treatments/diagnoses.
And how many of those cancer treatments would have gone ahead if the NHS was drowning in Covid patients?
We were not drowning in covid patients - there was no reason for these to be cancelled.
We were not drowning in covid patients - there was no reason for these to be cancelled.
The whole point was to protect the NHS - They still shut it down.
This is a complete mismanagement -
You really, really don't get it, do you?
You really, really don't get it, do you?
Even in the dark days of March and April the hospitals were only about 65% full so they say. Most hospitals were not full in fact far from it.
( My Mum has been in and out of 3 south east London hospitals and is now in her 4th, Sidcup and honestly these have not been full at any time)
Because we had a lockdown. And that is why we will likely need another one.
241 deaths.
The exponential trajectory is getting nasty now.
The 2nd wave will dwarf the 1st one.
That can't be right, they were all closed and not offering any treatment other than Covid...
241 deaths.
The exponential trajectory is getting nasty now.
The 2nd wave will dwarf the 1st one.
Looking at my area this morning, we have no covid cases...I could only call my GP because I am late with my bi-annual blood test I have for a slight blood disorder that if not checked could turn not nice. No blood tests available for 4 weeks because of Covid I was just told, so thats 2 months late for me.
You know both those things can be true, right ?
Figures from the national NHS operational dashboard, seen by HSJ, show that 40.9 per cent of NHS general acute beds were unoccupied as of the weekend — 37,500 of the total 91,600 relevant beds recorded in the data. That is 4,500 more than the 33,000 the NHS said had been freed up on 27 March, and nearly four times the normal amount of free acute beds at this time of year.
The need to switch beds to critical care use is underlined by figures also included in the dashboard. The number of patients in critical care within London, for example, already exceeds the pre-pandemic total.
The dashboard figures are marked “unvalidated”, and some believe they are overstating the number of empty beds, but they are based on daily reports and are being used widely in the coronavirus response.
The share of beds unoccupied in London, and Birmingham and the Black Country — where there have been the most serious covid-19 cases — are lower, at 28.9 per cent and 38.2 per cent respectively.
We need to get to the bottom of these hospital numbers
Why is the Gov saying hospitals are getting over run and yet local Mayors/MPs are saying they are not and it’s normal numbers for this time of year?
These are not all labour mayors etc - they are Tories as well