LamieRobertson
Not awoke
Great, thanks. Wife was having a bit of a wobbly at the "soaring" cases. Will show her.
Perhaps also remind her that cases aren’t necessarily ill people..but then you know that
Great, thanks. Wife was having a bit of a wobbly at the "soaring" cases. Will show her.
Perhaps also remind her that cases aren’t necessarily ill people..but then you know that
The first time recently I have avoided a person who looked ill
Worth a read: www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-57640550
PS. cases 1000 a day last August 2020 when I was taken to hospital for something else.
I suspect high numbers of cases will cause problems for hospital admissions, And that the vaccine wears off? Deficiency after six months?
This is weekend numbers right ?Infection numbers have been lower in each of the last three days than in the preceding 2 days, and the rolling 7 day average for deaths has again shown a slight fall today……….
This is weekend numbers right ?
Do you think we are at tipping point now. Read a few articles that say we will hit 100k before going down ?
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Infection numbers have been lower in each of the last three days than in the preceding 2 days, and the rolling 7 day average for deaths has again shown a slight fall today……….
I'm sure I recall someone saying the same when we were at c7,000 cases/day, and I was mocked for saying "cases are still growing quickly"...
As I said in that conversation, there is a broad pattern in the ebb and flow of case numbers across the week, and there's absolutely nothing in the numbers that make me think we're anywhere close to topping out. Current growth makes it difficult to see why we won't be north of 50k/day in the not-too-distant future.
However, in the spirit of the aim of the thread...
1. 7-day average growth has come slightly off the peak. Standing at 66.9% as of yesterday's numbers, down from 74.2% on Friday.
2. James Ward's excellent analysis shows signs of hope - twitter thread here: https://twitter.com/JamesWard73/status/1411730026635087877?s=20, first tweet below:
[tweet]1411730026635087877[/tweet]
No choice but to live with it but who makes the rules?Two weeks today and we step out of Lockdown. It’s going to be a fantastic day. Yes, people are worried but this is a positive phase toward living and dealing with Covid.
If, as it seems increasingly likely, this virus escaped from the Wuhan laboratory and is specifically designed to mutate and form variants, then we are never getting rid of it. Time to live with it.
Two weeks today and we step out of Lockdown. It’s going to be a fantastic day. Yes, people are worried but this is a positive phase toward living and dealing with Covid.
If, as it seems increasingly likely, this virus escaped from the Wuhan laboratory and is specifically designed to mutate and form variants, then we are never getting rid of it. Time to live with it.
No choice but to live with it but who makes the rules?
All viruses mutate and form variants don’t they? It’s evolution baby.
A laboratory engineered virus could be more likely to not mutate and form variants.
IIRC this is the "Good News" thread, not the "Conspiracy Theory" thread.
The NHS can cope with the rising cases as England eases out of restrictions on July 19, the service's director has said.
Prof Stephen Powis, national medical director of NHS England, said despite the rising number of infections, the NHS was "used to coping with pressures" and was prepared.
"The NHS deals with pressures all the time and there is not doubt that as hospital numbers rise over the next few weeks that we will have to manage that pressure," he told BBC Breakfast.
"A&Es are busy again as life gets back to normal but we're well used to coping with pressures, we do it every year and every winter. So we are prepared and, as you have seen over the last 18 months of the pandemic, the NHS will manage."
Prime Minister Boris Johnson is expected to announce later on Monday that almost all restrictions will be scrapped on July 19 pending a data review in a week's time.
Prof Powis said: "We'll be keeping a very close eye on the data but at the moment, like I say, things are looking very good.
Partial easing was always going to cause an increase - and the next unlocking will do the same - it’s managed/calculated risk. The good news, as well as a possible flattening starting in this phase, is the numbers are still quite low relative to the peak, and I also think we’ll move away from looking at infection rates in any depth at all anyway - it’s the hospitalisation, ITU and death numbers that are key (our ‘infection rate’ is immensely skewed relative to other countries due to the huge volume of testing we’ve been doing). The deaths remain low and seem pretty stable thankfully, but need to see hospitalisations do the same - even they aren’t increasing at anything like the same rate as infections have, nor when compared with previous waves.