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Author: Subject: Any one know someone with/had Cov1d 19 ???
SteveWalker

posted on 12/1/21 at 11:09 AM Reply With Quote
New figures for last year show 15% (almost 91,000) more deaths than the 5 year average - in a year that was previously expected to have well below average deaths.

Whether Covid-19 is killing lots of people directly or exacerbating existing conditions so that those kill them does not matter. It clearly is causing a huge number of extra deaths.

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joneh

posted on 12/1/21 at 11:46 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by SteveWalker
New figures for last year show 15% (almost 91,000) more deaths than the 5 year average - in a year that was previously expected to have well below average deaths.

Whether Covid-19 is killing lots of people directly or exacerbating existing conditions so that those kill them does not matter. It clearly is causing a huge number of extra deaths.


It is, but we need to remember that no all of those deaths are caused by covid or exacerbated by covid, but a vast sizeable chunk are caused by the response to covid. During the first wave, PHE attributed 52% of the excess deaths to Covid. So 48% were attributed to "other causes" i.e Lockdown related issues, such as people not visiting A&E. Take heart attack symptom visits, that was down 5000 visits to A&E on average, and on average has a 10% mortality rate if people don't visit hospital. So potentially 500 deaths are attributed to fear of visiting hospital. Cancer diagnosis was down 20,000 cases just in April. These are not my figures, but from PHE.

This is part of the basis for my argument that Lockdowns don't save lives, if that's the ultimate aim.

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Irony

posted on 12/1/21 at 12:17 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by joneh

This is part of the basis for my argument that Lockdowns don't save lives, if that's the ultimate aim.


So you are effectively stating the the governments across the globe and their scientific advisors are all wrong and you are correct? Wow!!!!

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joneh

posted on 12/1/21 at 12:29 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Irony
quote:
Originally posted by joneh

This is part of the basis for my argument that Lockdowns don't save lives, if that's the ultimate aim.


So you are effectively stating the the governments across the globe and their scientific advisors are all wrong and you are correct? Wow!!!!


No, are you saying that governments across the globe that haven't locked down and their scientific advisors are wrong and you're correct? Wow!!

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Irony

posted on 12/1/21 at 01:10 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by joneh
quote:
Originally posted by Irony
quote:
Originally posted by joneh

This is part of the basis for my argument that Lockdowns don't save lives, if that's the ultimate aim.


So you are effectively stating the the governments across the globe and their scientific advisors are all wrong and you are correct? Wow!!!!


No, are you saying that governments across the globe that haven't locked down and their scientific advisors are wrong and you're correct? Wow!!



No I am not.

I don't believe that I am privvy to all the relevant and accurate information that would enable me to 'argue' either way. If I were privvy to that knowledge it wouldn't matter because I know basically nothing about virology and epidemiology.

Surely by making such a statement you are hinting at the fact that you are an expert in epidemiology and virology. Also that you have access to accurate, relevant and up to date information. Hence the 'Wow'.

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swanny

posted on 12/1/21 at 01:19 PM Reply With Quote
i suppose to test out whether lockdowns actually save lives or not you'd need to run a control group, and have an entire country just decide not to lockdown at all and see how many die.

the reality is, no one is able to do this. what we can see (from what i have read) is that even in countries that have initially tried this the death toll becomes so high, and the rate of rise becomes so rapid that you have to lockdown.

i hear lots of people say lockdowns don't work. but having seen the evidence of when people observe them well, the numbers fall and this seems to suggest that they do. (this doesn't take into account other 'at home' deaths of course)

the other thing is to look at countries that have locked down strictly right from the start versus those that thought it would sort itself out shortly. Australia now have tiny amounts of cases and ours is surging. family in Oz cant believe the hash our country appears to have made of all this.

they locked down hard at the start, before it was too late, they closed regional borders before it was too late and offered enforced quarantine for any overseas arrivals, and guess what they hardly have any cases.

come to think of it, maybe we are the control group.....

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daviep

posted on 12/1/21 at 01:36 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by joneh



It is, but we need to remember that no all of those deaths are caused by covid or exacerbated by covid, but a vast sizeable chunk are caused by the response to covid. During the first wave, PHE attributed 52% of the excess deaths to Covid. So 48% were attributed to "other causes" i.e Lockdown related issues, such as people not visiting A&E. Take heart attack symptom visits, that was down 5000 visits to A&E on average, and on average has a 10% mortality rate if people don't visit hospital. So potentially 500 deaths are attributed to fear of visiting hospital. Cancer diagnosis was down 20,000 cases just in April. These are not my figures, but from PHE.

This is part of the basis for my argument that Lockdowns don't save lives, if that's the ultimate aim.


I don't really understand your argument, you seem to be suggesting that without lock down the National Health Service would continue operating in a normal fashion while thousands of people die. Where do you think these people are going to? Quietly dying at home so that the rest of the population can access health care? Obviously once the NHS is swamped with covid related patients nobody will be receiving health care, at that point you have a high covid death rate + high incidental rate?

We in the UK live on a small congested island, look how hard it has been to avoid the spread even with restrictions on socialising in place.

Davie





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joneh

posted on 12/1/21 at 02:00 PM Reply With Quote
quote:

I don't really understand your argument, you seem to be suggesting that without lock down the National Health Service would continue operating in a normal fashion while thousands of people die. Where do you think these people are going to? Quietly dying at home so that the rest of the population can access health care? Obviously once the NHS is swamped with covid related patients nobody will be receiving health care, at that point you have a high covid death rate + high incidental rate?

We in the UK live on a small congested island, look how hard it has been to avoid the spread even with restrictions on socialising in place.

Davie



No, I'm not suggesting that at all. Looking at the Zoe data, peak infection for London was pre-lockdown. So Lockdown will have had very little, if no impact on the current level in London hospitals. The zoe data shows another drop in infections everywhere (other than NW), so the trend is heading in the right direction. I'm not advocating for a let it rip scenario, with proper shielding of the vulnerable and over 60 (which we're not currently doing) and the remaining population continue as normal. Similar to the Swedish model, but with proper shielding of the vulnerable. Many models suggest that a two tiered approach of shielding and carrying on as normal would save more lives due to the stark difference in morbidity between these two groups and the threshold required for HIT.

I'm not an expert in virology, but I am an expert in test, particularly complex algorithm modelling. I can read and understand the modelling & testing. We know the UCL modelling was appalling, which is what Lockdown was based off, why not look at other models or suggestions? There are at least 22 peered reviewed papers on Lockdowns arguing that they have a low efficacy, published by publications such as the Lancet. They're not Icke style conspiracy theories!

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Toys2

posted on 12/1/21 at 02:08 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by daviep

I don't really understand your argument, you seem to be suggesting that without lock down the National Health Service would continue operating in a normal fashion while thousands of people die. Where do you think these people are going to? Quietly dying at home so that the rest of the population can access health care? Obviously once the NHS is swamped with covid related patients nobody will be receiving health care, at that point you have a high covid death rate + high incidental rate?

We in the UK live on a small congested island, look how hard it has been to avoid the spread even with restrictions on socialising in place.

Davie


Absolutely, there's so many people coming up with over simplified solutions that don't hold up to scrutiny



Most of the country has various levels of tier or lockdown for the last few months and our health system is still getting overloaded with Covid Patients, what would have happened with less controls?

I'm a firm believer that we could've had less draconian measures, if they were followed. As it is, we all have to suffer stricter measures because there are idiots out there that don't even do the basics and the frustrating thing is, "hands face space" really doesn't impact your quality of life

I normally don't comment because the deny'ers annoy me too much, that's not to say that we shouldn't challenge the data or interpretation

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Toys2

posted on 12/1/21 at 02:16 PM Reply With Quote
On the idea of ring fencing the vulnerable, so that everyone else can ride it out, that's just naive

One of the members of my direct family is extremely clinically vulnerable due to an immune deficiency, but otherwise healthy
So how would that work, would we lock them in a room whilst the rest of the house got covid and hope that we don't kill our family member? Or I couldn't go to work and the kids couldn't go to school?

What about the 24 year old guy at work who damaged his kidneys playing rugby, so he can't go to work?

Another guy who has asthma, mild enough that none of us knew, but he's on the vulnerable list?

My company were very progressive when it first hit, they initially sent home all of the vulnerable people, we lost about 15% of our workforce, some absolutely key people, of the 40 or so people, I'd say only 2 of them would you consider to be unhealthy

How would care homes operate if the staff can't come in contact with the residents?

What about visiting grandparents, that's be impossible?


The ONS estimated that for most of last year there was about 0.5 - 1% of the population who had Covid at any time, now it may be 2%
The likelihood of having it and passing it on to those few that I mentioned was low

Now imagine that it's allowed to run wild in the "healthy and young" population, the chances of passing it on to the vulnerable is significantly greater



It's not practical to ring fence the vulnerable, if you have to interface with them

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joneh

posted on 12/1/21 at 02:21 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Toys2
quote:
Originally posted by daviep

I don't really understand your argument, you seem to be suggesting that without lock down the National Health Service would continue operating in a normal fashion while thousands of people die. Where do you think these people are going to? Quietly dying at home so that the rest of the population can access health care? Obviously once the NHS is swamped with covid related patients nobody will be receiving health care, at that point you have a high covid death rate + high incidental rate?

We in the UK live on a small congested island, look how hard it has been to avoid the spread even with restrictions on socialising in place.

Davie


Absolutely, there's so many people coming up with over simplified solutions that don't hold up to scrutiny



Most of the country has various levels of tier or lockdown for the last few months and our health system is still getting overloaded with Covid Patients, what would have happened with less controls?

I'm a firm believer that we could've had less draconian measures, if they were followed. As it is, we all have to suffer stricter measures because there are idiots out there that don't even do the basics and the frustrating thing is, "hands face space" really doesn't impact your quality of life

I normally don't comment because the deny'ers annoy me too much, that's not to say that we shouldn't challenge the data or interpretation


Or, those methods don't work particular well for a respiratory virus? They'd work very well for Norovirus, and if you take a look at the PHE Norovirus Outbreak Reporting Tool you can see the massive impact washing hands and social distancing had. It shows that they are widely adhered too. i.e. we can't blame "rule breakers".

Take a look at the dramatic effect it had below. I don't think its too much of a stretch to think the UK approach is wrong, maybe tiers & lockdown don't work in the UK, rather than saying well we need to Lockdown harder or it's the rule breakers fault.

https://hnors.phe.gov.uk/

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coyoteboy

posted on 12/1/21 at 04:08 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by joneh

Or, those methods don't work particular well for a respiratory virus? They'd work very well for Norovirus, and if you take a look at the PHE Norovirus Outbreak Reporting Tool you can see the massive impact washing hands and social distancing had. It shows that they are widely adhered too. i.e. we can't blame "rule breakers".

Take a look at the dramatic effect it had below. I don't think its too much of a stretch to think the UK approach is wrong, maybe tiers & lockdown don't work in the UK, rather than saying well we need to Lockdown harder or it's the rule breakers fault.

https://hnors.phe.gov.uk/


They work very well when adhered to. Not perfectly, but well enough to help keep a lid on it and give vulnerable folk a chance. Plenty of places where compliance was heavily enforced and the population are more influencable (be that a good thing or not in other circumstances) have seen total plummeting of cases and deaths right down to zero - we've never come close. It's common sense. It's an airborn virus, it has limited ways to travel, and short distances. The problem is that just looking out the window I see 50% of the populating ignoring the rules. a further 25% stretching them a little - 2m distance? well...1m, and I'm only passing for a short time. The one time I go into a pharmacy to collect a prescription, 2 people walk in with no mask, one of them barges past me and grunts in my face.

If we locked down hard and properly it would function properly and we'd see drops, but we have a smart-arse population of knowitall idiots who question every expert opinion instead of just following the guidance, because they're "woke" and "not sheep" - and for that reason we see endless partial lockdowns, and economy crumbling, mental health crisis after crisis. They're the cause of the failure. They need to grow up, accept responsibility for ever increasing deaths, and act like they care about other people.

Honestly, the level of selfishness, arrogance and stupidity I see across social media makes me not want to be part of the human race.






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daviep

posted on 12/1/21 at 04:15 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by coyoteboy
If we locked down hard and properly it would function properly and we'd see drops, but we have a smart-arse population of knowitall idiots who question every expert opinion instead of just following the guidance, because they're "woke" and "not sheep" - and for that reason we see endless partial lockdowns, and economy crumbling, mental health crisis after crisis. They're the cause of the failure. They need to grow up, accept responsibility for ever increasing deaths, and act like they care about other people.

Honestly, the level of selfishness, arrogance and stupidity I see across social media makes me not want to be part of the human race.


Agree 100%





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Irony

posted on 12/1/21 at 04:22 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by daviep
quote:
Originally posted by coyoteboy
If we locked down hard and properly it would function properly and we'd see drops, but we have a smart-arse population of knowitall idiots who question every expert opinion instead of just following the guidance, because they're "woke" and "not sheep" - and for that reason we see endless partial lockdowns, and economy crumbling, mental health crisis after crisis. They're the cause of the failure. They need to grow up, accept responsibility for ever increasing deaths, and act like they care about other people.

Honestly, the level of selfishness, arrogance and stupidity I see across social media makes me not want to be part of the human race.


Agree 100%


Agree 100%

My uncle lives in Marrakesh and he said during their lockdown if you were caught on the streets without a valid excuse you went to jail. Right there and then - Jail. Total deaths 7700.

[Edited on 12/1/21 by Irony]

[Edited on 12/1/21 by Irony]

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joneh

posted on 12/1/21 at 04:39 PM Reply With Quote
quote:

If we locked down hard and properly it would function properly and we'd see drops, but we have a smart-arse population of knowitall idiots who question every expert opinion instead of just following the guidance, because they're "woke" and "not sheep" - and for that reason we see endless partial lockdowns, and economy crumbling, mental health crisis after crisis. They're the cause of the failure. They need to grow up, accept responsibility for ever increasing deaths, and act like they care about other people.

Honestly, the level of selfishness, arrogance and stupidity I see across social media makes me not want to be part of the human rac



So is it that we've not locked down hard, or the idiots fault? Because at no point have the government recommended a hard lockdown.

Either way, I 100% disagree with this. Prof Valance predicted in March that winter would be a disaster if we kept locked down and suppressed the virus and didn't achieve some sort of degree of herd immunity. He said we should keep infections below the NHS threshold and not suppress it completely. He's clearly not an idiot, but for one reason or another, the Government choose a different path (maybe they're the idiots you referred too?).

I think it's extremely naïve to label anyone who suggests an alternative approach an idiot or that rule breakers are responsible and without them this would magically go away. Is the director of Evidence based medicine at Oxford University an idiot? If he is, he's done well.

I'm not suggesting that Lockdowns don't work at suppressing the virus, they do. I'm just open to the idea that there are better methods that could save more lives and completely suppressing the virus might not be the best method, as clear by our current situation.

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jps

posted on 12/1/21 at 04:49 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by swanny
i suppose to test out whether lockdowns actually save lives or not you'd need to run a control group, and have an entire country just decide not to lockdown at all and see how many die.

the reality is, no one is able to do this. what we can see (from what i have read) is that even in countries that have initially tried this the death toll becomes so high, and the rate of rise becomes so rapid that you have to lockdown.


By my understanding, this is the point. We have to implement restrictions to stop it getting as bad as it might. It's impossible to evidence what you've prevented.

If COVID were allowed to spread unfettered, the hospitals would not be able to cope - so not everyone who needed treatment would be able to get it.

The problem is not that lots of people would die of COVID (although some might) but I suspect the larger problem is that people would then not be saved from dying for all the 'routine' reasons people across the UK come close to death on a daily basis - but are usually saved.

This might be severe things like car crashes/accidents at work/unexpected heart attacks/asthma attacks, but I suspect probably also a whole host of very benign things that 100 years ago might have killed people, but in 'normal' conditions in 2021, don't...

[Edited on 12/1/21 by jps]

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daviep

posted on 12/1/21 at 10:07 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by joneh
quote:

If we locked down hard and properly it would function properly and we'd see drops, but we have a smart-arse population of knowitall idiots who question every expert opinion instead of just following the guidance, because they're "woke" and "not sheep" - and for that reason we see endless partial lockdowns, and economy crumbling, mental health crisis after crisis. They're the cause of the failure. They need to grow up, accept responsibility for ever increasing deaths, and act like they care about other people.

Honestly, the level of selfishness, arrogance and stupidity I see across social media makes me not want to be part of the human rac



So is it that we've not locked down hard, or the idiots fault? Because at no point have the government recommended a hard lockdown.

Either way, I 100% disagree with this. Prof Valance predicted in March that winter would be a disaster if we kept locked down and suppressed the virus and didn't achieve some sort of degree of herd immunity. He said we should keep infections below the NHS threshold and not suppress it completely. He's clearly not an idiot, but for one reason or another, the Government choose a different path (maybe they're the idiots you referred too?).

I think it's extremely naïve to label anyone who suggests an alternative approach an idiot or that rule breakers are responsible and without them this would magically go away. Is the director of Evidence based medicine at Oxford University an idiot? If he is, he's done well.

I'm not suggesting that Lockdowns don't work at suppressing the virus, they do. I'm just open to the idea that there are better methods that could save more lives and completely suppressing the virus might not be the best method, as clear by our current situation.


Vallance was/is the mastermind behind the government response, which clearly failed because we are in a bit of a mess now. Vallance also predicted 20,000 deaths in March we are now over 80,000 so he didn't to well on that.

Here's an interview with Vallance in March where he hails the quality of our track and trace scheme, which was proven to be completely inadequate, he also casually answers that around 60% of the population need to become infected for herd immunity to be effective, the host points out that 1% of deaths of 60% of the population is a lot of deaths.
INTERVIEW HERE

Your argument is untenable, the expert who you have cited is the person who masterminded the UK response, either the response was incorrect or we did not implement it properly or in other words people did not follow the advice, rule breakers as you call them. I believe it is actually both.

I believe the governments cavalier attitude at the beginning has had a huge effect on peoples perception of the situation we were in at the time. Remember BoJo saying things like "we'll just take it on the chin" and boasting that he went to a hospital and shook hands with someone infected? or Cummings taking a little jolly around the country. No wonder people will not follow governemet advice.

Regards
Davie





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nick205

posted on 13/1/21 at 04:56 PM Reply With Quote
Wanted to add to this thread as my oldest friend of 40 years lost his faher to COVID-19 a few days before Christmas. His mother had it as well, but stayed at home and symptoms were a runny nose and sore throat for a few days. Funeral on Monday next week, which I shall be going to in support of my friend and his mum.

Another school friend recently lost his father to it as well.

The virus seems closer and more dangerous as time goes on!

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steve m

posted on 13/1/21 at 05:37 PM Reply With Quote
Ive just found out that my next door neighbours, have got it, and isolating, so has one of there Sons and also the Sister from my Neighbours

And none of them have seen each other, in over a month, so not passing it through the family,

Well, me, and Mrs M, are staying in now, come what ever, !!

steve





Thats was probably spelt wrong, or had some grammer, that the "grammer police have to have a moan at




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James

posted on 13/1/21 at 10:21 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by mgb281
There’s no doubt that the person who started this thread is one of those conspiracy believers or else the two funeral director friends are incompetent. The number of excess deaths is real not imagined, the temporary morgues that are filling up with bodies is real not imagined. The whole problem is that these are not the normal misguided people but are using underhanded means to push their agenda. Whether filming out patient departments at night when they are deserted or the hospital cafes which are also closed due to government restrictions to try and persuade us that hospitals are empty. These forums are being used to spread their dangerous rhetoric, fortunately there are more visiting this forum with more sense and first hand knowledge of this devastating disease. Life will never be the same again but with the vaccines that are now being used it will get better. The efficacy of the vaccines is more than 90% not 60% as has been stated.
As for complaining that you are volunteering to administer the vaccine and are made to undergo some training, so what’s the problem? My wife is a practice nurse with over 45 years experience, she has been running flu clinics and children’s immunisation clinics for years and she had to undergo training. She is working extra hours to help vaccinate more people despite being over retirement age, it’s no big deal it’s what she trained to do.
So if you are one of those that peddle lies and conspiracy theories go and join Donald Trump, who is equally mentally deficient!Probably I will be thrown out of the forum for posting this but if everyone kept to the two metre rule, wore a face mask AND did not socialise in groups we would not be in this position.
End of rant



Mate,

I don't think this is really necessary on a good forum full of really decent people.

I know you're fairly new compared to some of us and perhaps don't 'know' the characters involved but perhaps you could tone down the rant a little?

Cheers!





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sdh2903

posted on 13/1/21 at 10:37 PM Reply With Quote
This is a very emotive subject. I'm not going to add any fuel to the fire with any opinions. However one thing I've noticed is people seem to be very intolerant of any opinion that doesn't align with their own.

Just because you don't agree with something doesn't make you or the other person wrong or right. Facts figures and news can all be twisted to suit whichever rhetoric.

A differing opinion doesn't require name calling or rubbishing that person nor does it make them a "retard" or anything else. Opinions are like arseholes everyone has one.

We need to stick together (but apart) stop sniping and look forward to a hopefully better second half of the year and beyond.

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James

posted on 13/1/21 at 10:45 PM Reply With Quote
For those more interested in facts than rhetoric, I find More or Less to be a really excellent program and popping a few nonsense bubbles!

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qshd



Cheers,
James





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russbost

posted on 14/1/21 at 08:12 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by sdh2903
This is a very emotive subject. I'm not going to add any fuel to the fire with any opinions. However one thing I've noticed is people seem to be very intolerant of any opinion that doesn't align with their own.

Just because you don't agree with something doesn't make you or the other person wrong or right. Facts figures and news can all be twisted to suit whichever rhetoric.

A differing opinion doesn't require name calling or rubbishing that person nor does it make them a "retard" or anything else. Opinions are like arseholes everyone has one.

We need to stick together (but apart) stop sniping and look forward to a hopefully better second half of the year and beyond.


Seconded, this is as divisive a subject as Brexit was & that caused a few ripples!

The press/media has made this all the worse, just as it did with Brexit by sensationalising everything & invariably reporting from the worst angle possible.

This group should be about engineering & helping one another with many & various car & non car projects & far better that we all pull together for improvement than bitch at each other to no sensible end


Here's to 2021 being a LOT better than 2020, even if it's not got off to the greatest start!





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joneh

posted on 14/1/21 at 09:13 AM Reply With Quote
The head of Immunisation for PHE, Dr Ramsey has just suggested to the Science & Technology Committee that England may follow a focused protection strategy, where protection is given to the vulnerable and the disease is allowed to circulate the young, where not causing much harm.

Feel free to Google the minutes.

[Sarcasm]
What an idiot!
[\Sarcasm]

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woodster

posted on 15/1/21 at 10:50 PM Reply With Quote
I had it last April I can only tell you it’s the strangest illness I’ve ever had ... completely messed me up .. bad headaches, no taste or smell, couldn’t breathe through my nose, chest had a burning feeling in my air ways, tooth pain, very bad fatigue and muscle pain, migraines and the oddest thing a craving for sugary foods and drinks, weight loss and a very deep emotional depression..... it took me 4 months to start to feel right ... I was very frightened and I’m not usually easily upset ...god help anyone who gets it really bad ... I still sometimes feel knackered
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