https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/formula1/51963897
Matt Hancock, Secretary of State for Health and Social Care in the UK also said tonight that F1 teams were working to manufacture the ventilators.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/formula1/51963897
i think that's a bit of morale-boosting PR tbh, according to https://www.wired.co.uk/article/car-man ... entilators the most they or car manufacturers can do is weld frames and make some components with additive manufacturingDiesel wrote: ↑20 Mar 2020, 00:03https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/formula1/51963897
Matt Hancock, Secretary of State for Health and Social Care in the UK also said tonight that F1 teams were working to manufacture the ventilators.
Not true if everybody else outside has reduced in numbers, recovered or died off by time quarantine folks come out. See China for example which recorded zero inside deaths today. All other deaths were from outsiders.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Mar 2020, 21:24If everyone hides and doesn't get the virus, when they come back out of hiding, any source of the virus will cause a new outbreak. And if everyone has been in hiding for weeks, try getting them to go back and do it all again. They won't do it. The result will be huge number of new cases, most of which will be old and will then likely die. The health system will not cope. Lots of people will die.bluechris wrote: ↑19 Mar 2020, 21:01Your solution would had been perfect if there where no old people, i suppose it's fine to pass it to your parents or grandparents right?Just_a_fan wrote:
No. One solution is to be healthy, get it and recover. Let's remember that the vast majority will get it and recover just fine.
This is not Ebola.
Heck, measles is a bigger risk in populations that aren't fully vaccinated than Covid-19 is in a similar situation.
This is the flaw in the lockdown plan.
zibby43 wrote: ↑19 Mar 2020, 23:49This graph is a simple way to represent why extreme social distancing measures are necessary.
The red line represents surge critical care bed capacity.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/ETbvzf2UcAA ... name=large
Without the social distancing measures, the healthcare system will be completely overwhelmed.
My fiancee is an ER nurse. I'm terrified for her on a daily basis. Since she is staying at work to help people survive, I ask that everyone else do their part and stay at home.
4 weeks gone for the world.. 40 more to go. Multiply that by some exponential factor..and
Thank you very much for the kind words, izzy. I will share them with her. I hope that you and yours stay safe and healthy during this crazy, stressful time.izzy wrote: ↑20 Mar 2020, 00:37https://www.imperial.ac.uk/ImageCropToo ... jpg?r=6329zibby43 wrote: ↑19 Mar 2020, 23:49This graph is a simple way to represent why extreme social distancing measures are necessary.
The red line represents surge critical care bed capacity.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/ETbvzf2UcAA ... name=large
Without the social distancing measures, the healthcare system will be completely overwhelmed.
My fiancee is an ER nurse. I'm terrified for her on a daily basis. Since she is staying at work to help people survive, I ask that everyone else do their part and stay at home.
MASSIVE respect to your fiancee! We here are thinking of you both. This is the full chart tho, with the time extending to a year. It shows what their model predicted if there isn't a vaccine by the time the serious measures are relaxed: it actually gets a bit worse than 'doing nothing'! And it gets worse if they close schools than if they don't, this is why they've delayed it. It all depends exactly when of course.
The bottom chart is the top one zoomed in.
https://www.imperial.ac.uk/news/196234/ ... ly-impact/
Agreed. Further steps include cancelling elective medical procedures and hiring new staff (both steps have been taken locally). In my fiancee's department, recently retired nurses are being allowed to come out of retirement and join the fight (the word hero gets overused, but I believe it is entirely appropriate in this case).hollus wrote: ↑20 Mar 2020, 01:02To inject some optimism, that red line in the model just above assumes constant capacity in the health system. The reality is that the system is building extra capacity right now. More beds are being readied, more ventilators are coming online, as we speak. The health system will be much more capable in a few weeks than it is now.
Lockdown until we find a cure... if it lasts too long, protect the weakest and hope the others become immune for this sh***Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Mar 2020, 23:08And you don't understand that a lock down will not stop people dying.Capharol wrote: ↑19 Mar 2020, 22:18it seems you don't understand WHY we all go into lockdown.... i would suggest read more about Covid and then come back with a better argumentJust_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Mar 2020, 22:00
No. I'm not dumb, thanks. If you insult people you do not do your argument any favours.
You are in a minority group so you need to deal with things differently. But locking down the whole country won't help in your situation. The reason is obvious.
How long should we lock down for? A couple of weeks? A couple of months? Do you even know? And if it's for several months, will it be effective for that long? Can any country even effectively lock down for several weeks or months?
And after the lock down, how many will become infected in the immediate period?
It probably has more to do with spring break for schools and universities being in full swing. Just google what the Florida beaches have looked like for the last 3 weeks... Don’t forget, everyone can catch the virus, the younger generally have a better chance at survival.
It’s not just the US.RZS10 wrote: ↑20 Mar 2020, 02:06Does anyone believe they'll be able to uphold a lockdown for more than a month, maybe two? A majority would simply start ignoring it at some point and then i wanna see any western country roll out the tanks and military to stop them ... lol
I just hope they put together some vaccine, give it to all the old people who were on the clock anyways but keep dying to corona and we can go back to our normal lives, accepting corona as a fact of life, not paying any attention when it kills a few thousand a year just like a bunch of other illnesses/viruses ... (but it will be 'fine' since there will be a vaccine)
I wonder if the large number of young americans being hospitalized has to do with them being fat, that's supposedly a factor, innit?