Went for a short walk (on normally busy pavements/roads) early afternoon today - eerily quiet. Very little traffic and not many people about.
Went for a short walk (on normally busy pavements/roads) early afternoon today - eerily quiet. Very little traffic and not many people about.
It definitely feels different to the first lockdown though. I don’t know whether it was the novelty factor, fear or just a sense of doing the right thing but when people were told to stay at home, they stayed at home. I would go for a run on my lunch break and the only other people I would encounter would be other people doing the same.
It got to the point where it was easier to run in the middle of a 40mph road because there was more chance of encountering someone running the other way on the path than a vehicle. In the space of an hour you might see the odd ambulance or food delivery van - there were virtually no civilian vehicles on the road those first few weeks.
I’ve scarcely been out myself since this one began (more out of work responsibilities than compliance) but when I have road traffic certainly feels more ‘normal’ than it did first time around.
It just seems a little counterintuitive. The circumstances are clearly more dire, and yet the restrictions looser. I just hope it’s effective because looking at some of the faces (well, eyes) of the many NHS workers interviewed on the news tonight was absolutely heartbreaking. There’s going to be some serious PTSD kicking around amongst hospital workers when this is all over. I feel for them.
Perhaps a publicly donated fund to help get them whatever help it is they need and deserve would be more apt than a half hearted clap on one’s doorstep.
Did Keral ever recover, or is he still injured?
I get 168,844 cases in w/c 9th December, so 4,738 deaths is 2.8% of that. What numbers have you used to get 4.3%?
I know vaccine supply is going to be an issue. But to ramp up the vaccinated numbers..... In addition to allowing pharmacy's to administer the Oxford vaccine, if they could somehow get supply's into private physicians with strict price capping, the government could massively increase total vaccinated numbers quicker and save millions.
Yes everyone should get it free, but if you're currently not eligible until late 21 or 2022. Who wouldn't pay £20 odd quid to get it done sooner?
Far too many places still open. How can garden centres and off licences be classed as essential services?? In reality for at least the month of January could we not suspend construction sites across the country too (most were suspended for 2 weeks around xmas in any case?) Also last time the big takeaway chains, McDonalds, Greggs etc were all closed. The March lockdown got the R rate down to approx 0.6, if the new strain is 70% more transmissible that would keep the R rate above 1 this time. Given that the lax attitude of people out and about and the higher number of places still open I think cases will continue to rise, by mid February there is absolutely no chance we will be or we should be coming out of lockdown. May is the very earliest I can forsee lockdown ending and even then it will be to let schools reopen.
Always going to be cases though. Cases not the issue as 99.7 recover or have no symptoms. Issue is cases impacting extremely vulnerable. Once these are protected then cases wont really have alot of relevance . Look at deaths outside the elderley and vulnerable and it really is nothing that should stop people living alongside other illnesses. Thats the hope
It will take quite some time for the pressure on thew NHS to relieve, I really can't see how we can morally exit lockdown until the pressure on the NHS from Covid has been practically eliminated (or at least down to last summers levels). Thanks to the advancements in treatment more people are recovering but it's a slow process so many of this people who are in now and of the 50-60k and rising of daily covid cases will be hospitalisations in a couple of weeks, these case rates are going to stay at 50k plus for the next 6 weeks minimum so the pressure on the NHS to continue treating these patients will go well beyond the hoped (and lets be honest unrealistic) expectation that all of the most vulnerable will have been vaccinated by mid Feb. This lockdown must be stricter to try and bring cases and in turn hospitalisations down in the short to medium term and must be longer than the end of March legislated to protect our NHS.
I was discussing the rationale for a full lockdown with a relative the other day, who said that cases were growing "exponentially" and so it was necessary. A quickly look at the gov.uk data, whether at a national level or regional level, shows that the daily increase in cases peaked (at least in this phase) on 29th December. I do understand that any new cases are bad news. But we appeared to be on the right track pre the Johnson bombshell, possibly because of the school holidays.
Cases are not rising exponentially, but they have risen dramatically over the last month or so (they were consistently below 20,000 back then), and continue to do so. I don't know what figures you're referring to, but yesterday's number of 62,322 was the highest recorded daily number on record.
We were not on the right track pre the Johnson bombshell, and the high number of cases and yesterday's record are in no small part of the decision to open up Christmas (which had to be restricted).
"exponentially" is a misused word. In the spread of infectious disease, the increase and decrease is always exponential. "Exponential" doesn't mean it's rising fast, it just means that the number of cases next week is based on the number of cases this week timed by the R number.I was discussing the rationale for a full lockdown with a relative the other day, who said that cases were growing "exponentially" and so it was necessary. A quickly look at the gov.uk data, whether at a national level or regional level, shows that the daily increase in cases peaked (at least in this phase) on 29th December. I do understand that any new cases are bad news. But we appeared to be on the right track pre the Johnson bombshell, possibly because of the school holidays.
"exponentially" is a misused word. In the spread of infectious disease, the increase and decrease is always exponential. "Exponential" doesn't mean it's rising fast, it just means that the number of cases next week is based on the number of cases this week timed by the R number.
This is kind of what I am getting at. The numbers are there, you only need to look.
The highest (in the current phase UK) total is 81,300, recorded 29 Dec. Go and look at the graph and run your cursor along it. The same is true for the South East region, London etc.
So as I said, any new cases are bad, but a bit of context is helpful.
https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/details/cases?areaType=overview&areaName=United%20Kingdom
be tiered though. Places like sussex where hospitals are not under pressure should be ok. Have to remember all hospitals are under pressure in winter. The nightingales are not open so think we should be ok.
The media are on a shock campaign remember.
Far too many places still open. How can garden centres and off licences be classed as essential services?? In reality for at least the month of January could we not suspend construction sites across the country too (most were suspended for 2 weeks around xmas in any case?) Also last time the big takeaway chains, McDonalds, Greggs etc were all closed. The March lockdown got the R rate down to approx 0.6, if the new strain is 70% more transmissible that would keep the R rate above 1 this time. Given that the lax attitude of people out and about and the higher number of places still open I think cases will continue to rise, by mid February there is absolutely no chance we will be or we should be coming out of lockdown. May is the very earliest I can forsee lockdown ending and even then it will be to let schools reopen.
What I saw on BBC News last night in London hospitals, with the expectations of worse to come in the next fortnight and then i other parts of the country, were very, very grim. No shock campaign, people need to realise what is actually happenming to our NHS currently.
There won’t be a binary, abrupt end to lockdown in May or any other time. There will be a progressive and cautious reversal through the tiers, region by region, primarily dependent on decreasing pressure on the NHS and reducing infection rates. I reckon there will be quite some easing of restrictions before May in some areas, but a full return to ‘normal’ (ie no restrictions) will be sometime after.