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Main Coronavirus / Covid-19 Discussion Thread



Weststander

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2011
69,243
Withdean area
Haven’t updated a while, my entire house is now negative.

I had no symptoms throughout and tested negative on a LTF after 7 days, extremely bizzare to have had COVID and literally no nothing of it.

I think omicron is the end of the pandemic, out competing all other variants and much milder, natural virus evolution.

With future more mild variants, we (the public and governments) need to disregard the media tunnel vision for case numbers. It’s NOT the key metric, in the same way that hardly anyone has any interest in flu or common cold case numbers.
 








Weststander

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2011
69,243
Withdean area
To me this is relative “good news”, but I don’t want to annoy @Lamie :lolol:

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Poojah

Well-known member
Nov 19, 2010
1,881
Leeds
I get all of the other countries mentioned here - all are massive with the exception of the UK which was hard hit in the first two waves and has a high quality of data recording, but what the hell happened in Peru!? It’s half the size of the UK, and I’ve hardly seen them mentioned over the course of the past two years.

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Green Cross Code Man

Wunt be druv
Mar 30, 2006
20,734
Eastbourne
I get all of the other countries mentioned here - all are massive with the exception of the UK which was hard hit in the first two waves and has a high quality of data recording, but what the hell happened in Peru!? It’s half the size of the UK, and I’ve hardly seen them mentioned over the course of the past two years.

View attachment 143577
It has been well known about Peru and their COVID problems. Some of the high figure may be caused by counting deaths 60 days after an infection unlike many other countries.

BBC News - Covid: Why has Peru been so badly hit?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-53150808
 




e77

Well-known member
May 23, 2004
7,270
Worthing
Without wishing to stop this 'everything back to normal' love in, this time round we had a mild variation so it didn't need mega amounts of intervention (although people still moaned about having to wear masks on a train, but I digress). If the next one - and there will be a next one - is the same or even milder then happy days but if it is stronger then we might have to bring in more restrictions.

Alternatively people refusing to take the vaccine might have to start to do some of the heavy lifting for society.
 




LamieRobertson

Not awoke
Feb 3, 2008
48,410
SHOREHAM BY SEA
Without wishing to stop this 'everything back to normal' love in, this time round we had a mild variation so it didn't need mega amounts of intervention (although people still moaned about having to wear masks on a train, but I digress). If the next one - and there will be a next one - is the same or even milder then happy days but if it is stronger then we might have to bring in more restrictions.

Alternatively people refusing to take the vaccine might have to start to do some of the heavy lifting for society.

Best not try to live life on the ‘what if’ basis then…oh and I’m not sure everything is back to normal is it? Never used to have to wear a mask to go and buy some food…and at the other end of the scale for the uk look at the restrictions for the other three home nations
 


Kinky Gerbil

Im The Scatman
NSC Patron
Jul 16, 2003
58,790
hassocks
Without wishing to stop this 'everything back to normal' love in, this time round we had a mild variation so it didn't need mega amounts of intervention (although people still moaned about having to wear masks on a train, but I digress). If the next one - and there will be a next one - is the same or even milder then happy days but if it is stronger then we might have to bring in more restrictions.

Alternatively people refusing to take the vaccine might have to start to do some of the heavy lifting for society.

The actions of Sturgeon, Drakeford and others will mean that message will be lost on large numbers.
 


dazzer6666

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Mar 27, 2013
55,518
Burgess Hill
Without wishing to stop this 'everything back to normal' love in, this time round we had a mild variation so it didn't need mega amounts of intervention (although people still moaned about having to wear masks on a train, but I digress). If the next one - and there will be a next one - is the same or even milder then happy days but if it is stronger then we might have to bring in more restrictions.

Alternatively people refusing to take the vaccine might have to start to do some of the heavy lifting for society.

It's nowhere near normal yet IMO, and in particular we're facing a really critical 2-3 weeks on admission numbers at least as the lag from the higher infection numbers unwinds (and that's assuming the infection peak has been reached/passed). From what I've read the expected evolution of such viruses tends towards progressively milder versions so there is some hope at least.

If and when we do reach the endemic stage, I'm looking forward to seeing what conclusions are drawn from what we did (and didn't do), what the real data is telling us (particularly in relation to incidence and severity of illness/death relative to vaccination status and the impact of this on the NHS, and to the 'real' numbers taking into account 'with' and because of' Covid - I'm pretty convinced comparisons between countries are bordering on meaningless at the moment on almost any level except excess deaths)

If we get past this peak/wave I can see all restrictions being binned off and the emphasis shifting completely to self-protection
 




dazzer6666

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Mar 27, 2013
55,518
Burgess Hill
Interesting read….DT extract

Full article https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/01/09/must-listen-south-african-scientists-omicron/

From symptoms to transmission - why we must listen to South African scientists on omicron

It’s time to heed the experts who provided the earliest data on omicron and are astonished at the UK’s reaction
By
Gordon Rayner,
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
9 January 2022 • 5:00am
south africa

‘There are several things we don’t know about omicron,” a sombre Professor Sir Chris Whitty told the nation in the week before Christmas, “but all the things we do know are bad.”

His comment puzzled many people at the time, given that scientists in South Africa, where omicron was first identified, had reported that it appeared to be less severe than the then-dominant delta variant of Covid. Surely that was good news?

Three weeks on, Sir Chris’s determination to dismiss the encouraging data coming from South Africa seems even more baffling. Instead of the post-Christmas lockdown that came to be regarded almost as an inevitability, Covid rules are now being eased. The NHS did not collapse, and the number of patients requiring ventilation remains less than a quarter of the peak a year ago.

Legitimate questions are now being asked about why Britain was so dismissive of the evidence from South Africa, and whether Government scientific advisers are once again using fear as a method of control.

One of those who is doing the asking is Angelique Coetzee, chairman of the South African Medical Association and the first doctor to raise the alarm over a possible new variant, which turned out to be omicron.

Dr Coetzee was among those who reported that omicron caused “very, very mild” symptoms compared with delta, and she hypothesised that it “could potentially be of great help to us” by replacing the more dangerous delta variant and helping the population to reach herd immunity at minimal cost to life. She says she was “astonished” at the panicked response to it in the UK.

“I don’t understand why it’s happening,” she told the Telegraph from her home in Pretoria. “It doesn’t make any sense to me. The fear that has been spread in Britain – why is that being done?

“South Africa has a younger population, but we should have seen far more disease than you because of the vaccination picture. We only have 44 per cent of people double-jabbed, and we only started the boosters last week.”

In the UK, 83 per cent of people are double-jabbed, and 61 per cent have had a booster.

“If you don’t know by now that the majority of people are going to have mild symptoms, then what other evidence are you waiting for?”
 


Fungus

Well-known member
NSC Patron
May 21, 2004
7,155
Truro
Interesting read….DT extract

Full article https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/01/09/must-listen-south-african-scientists-omicron/

From symptoms to transmission - why we must listen to South African scientists on omicron

It’s time to heed the experts who provided the earliest data on omicron and are astonished at the UK’s reaction
By
Gordon Rayner,
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
9 January 2022 • 5:00am
south africa

‘There are several things we don’t know about omicron,” a sombre Professor Sir Chris Whitty told the nation in the week before Christmas, “but all the things we do know are bad.”

His comment puzzled many people at the time, given that scientists in South Africa, where omicron was first identified, had reported that it appeared to be less severe than the then-dominant delta variant of Covid. Surely that was good news?

Three weeks on, Sir Chris’s determination to dismiss the encouraging data coming from South Africa seems even more baffling. Instead of the post-Christmas lockdown that came to be regarded almost as an inevitability, Covid rules are now being eased. The NHS did not collapse, and the number of patients requiring ventilation remains less than a quarter of the peak a year ago.

Legitimate questions are now being asked about why Britain was so dismissive of the evidence from South Africa, and whether Government scientific advisers are once again using fear as a method of control.

One of those who is doing the asking is Angelique Coetzee, chairman of the South African Medical Association and the first doctor to raise the alarm over a possible new variant, which turned out to be omicron.

Dr Coetzee was among those who reported that omicron caused “very, very mild” symptoms compared with delta, and she hypothesised that it “could potentially be of great help to us” by replacing the more dangerous delta variant and helping the population to reach herd immunity at minimal cost to life. She says she was “astonished” at the panicked response to it in the UK.

“I don’t understand why it’s happening,” she told the Telegraph from her home in Pretoria. “It doesn’t make any sense to me. The fear that has been spread in Britain – why is that being done?

“South Africa has a younger population, but we should have seen far more disease than you because of the vaccination picture. We only have 44 per cent of people double-jabbed, and we only started the boosters last week.”

In the UK, 83 per cent of people are double-jabbed, and 61 per cent have had a booster.

“If you don’t know by now that the majority of people are going to have mild symptoms, then what other evidence are you waiting for?”

Definitely an element of control by fear, rather than explaining the details. Partly because Boris feared he would gets his fingers burned if he tried to impose any additional restrictions, I guess.
 


A1X

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Sep 1, 2017
20,531
Deepest, darkest Sussex
I’m prepared to cut Whitty some slack on this. It’s increasingly clear a booster jab is key to keeping the vulnerable out of hospital, and is good for the rest of us too for Omicron. Spooking people into getting boosted has clearly worked, and that’s no bad thing.
 




dsr-burnley

Well-known member
Aug 15, 2014
2,625
I’m prepared to cut Whitty some slack on this. It’s increasingly clear a booster jab is key to keeping the vulnerable out of hospital, and is good for the rest of us too for Omicron. Spooking people into getting boosted has clearly worked, and that’s no bad thing.
There's an enormous problem with government by lies. The government - like all governments - is a bit mistrusted. But, when the government says this is necessary because it's dangerous and you might die if you don't do as we say - then, by and large, we do it.

But then if it appears that the government has been telling lies - and I think it has - then what happens next time there's an emergency? The government tells us this is dangerous, and we don't believe them.
 


Fungus

Well-known member
NSC Patron
May 21, 2004
7,155
Truro
There's an enormous problem with government by lies. The government - like all governments - is a bit mistrusted. But, when the government says this is necessary because it's dangerous and you might die if you don't do as we say - then, by and large, we do it.

But then if it appears that the government has been telling lies - and I think it has - then what happens next time there's an emergency? The government tells us this is dangerous, and we don't believe them.

Yeah, there are diminishing returns from scaring people. I'd much rather they treat us as reasonable adults, providing information about risks and uncertainties. Otherwise, we're heading (even further) down the road of ignorance, rumours and conspiracy theories.
 


dazzer6666

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Mar 27, 2013
55,518
Burgess Hill
There's an enormous problem with government by lies. The government - like all governments - is a bit mistrusted. But, when the government says this is necessary because it's dangerous and you might die if you don't do as we say - then, by and large, we do it.

But then if it appears that the government has been telling lies - and I think it has - then what happens next time there's an emergency? The government tells us this is dangerous, and we don't believe them.

Pretty much how that article sums it up at the end

The most gloomy predictions for the omicron wave now seem certain to have been wide of the mark. The problem for the Government is that if a more dangerous, vaccine-resistant variant arises, it could prove difficult to persuade an increasingly cynical public to do as they’re told.
 


Weststander

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2011
69,243
Withdean area
Interesting read….DT extract

Full article https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/01/09/must-listen-south-african-scientists-omicron/

From symptoms to transmission - why we must listen to South African scientists on omicron

It’s time to heed the experts who provided the earliest data on omicron and are astonished at the UK’s reaction
By
Gordon Rayner,
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
9 January 2022 • 5:00am
south africa

‘There are several things we don’t know about omicron,” a sombre Professor Sir Chris Whitty told the nation in the week before Christmas, “but all the things we do know are bad.”

His comment puzzled many people at the time, given that scientists in South Africa, where omicron was first identified, had reported that it appeared to be less severe than the then-dominant delta variant of Covid. Surely that was good news?

Three weeks on, Sir Chris’s determination to dismiss the encouraging data coming from South Africa seems even more baffling. Instead of the post-Christmas lockdown that came to be regarded almost as an inevitability, Covid rules are now being eased. The NHS did not collapse, and the number of patients requiring ventilation remains less than a quarter of the peak a year ago.

Legitimate questions are now being asked about why Britain was so dismissive of the evidence from South Africa, and whether Government scientific advisers are once again using fear as a method of control.

One of those who is doing the asking is Angelique Coetzee, chairman of the South African Medical Association and the first doctor to raise the alarm over a possible new variant, which turned out to be omicron.

Dr Coetzee was among those who reported that omicron caused “very, very mild” symptoms compared with delta, and she hypothesised that it “could potentially be of great help to us” by replacing the more dangerous delta variant and helping the population to reach herd immunity at minimal cost to life. She says she was “astonished” at the panicked response to it in the UK.

“I don’t understand why it’s happening,” she told the Telegraph from her home in Pretoria. “It doesn’t make any sense to me. The fear that has been spread in Britain – why is that being done?

“South Africa has a younger population, but we should have seen far more disease than you because of the vaccination picture. We only have 44 per cent of people double-jabbed, and we only started the boosters last week.”

In the UK, 83 per cent of people are double-jabbed, and 61 per cent have had a booster.

“If you don’t know by now that the majority of people are going to have mild symptoms, then what other evidence are you waiting for?”

My hunch was snobbery, an innate "they're South African, can we trust their science as much as something emanating from North America/UK/EU?".
 
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dazzer6666

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Mar 27, 2013
55,518
Burgess Hill
My hunch was a snobbery, an innate "they're South African, can we trust their science as much as something emanating from North America/UK/EU?".

Definitely think that was part of it…..but whilst they aren’t as developed in some areas (vaccination for example) they were basically leading the world on genome sequencing for Covid. Shocking that more credence wasn’t given to what they were saying really.
 


Weststander

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2011
69,243
Withdean area
Definitely think that was part of it…..but whilst they aren’t as developed in some areas (vaccination for example) they were basically leading the world on genome sequencing for Covid. Shocking that more credence wasn’t given to what they were saying really.

From day one, every possible reason to disregard RSA evidence was put forward .... in themselves, all wild guesses, and all negative reasons to ignore. For example:

"They have a young demographic".
"Their population has been exposed to HIV (and latterly HIV vaccines) for 35 years".
 


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