Really. You work in healthcare, right? Are you seriously suggesting that neither you no any of your colleagues had the faintest idea the ICUs were working at near capacity before the pandemic? — Isaac
Did you all look at your stock of ventilators and think "plenty there to handle a pandemic"? Di — Isaac
Yeah I know. A multinational conglomerate that has a documented history of lying about its products, plans to make billions out of injecting half the world with a chemical that's had one tenth of the testing and one fiftieth of the approval checks given to medicines normally administered to less than one thousandth of the target population, to alleviate the spread and hospitalisation rate of a virus despite no evidence whatsoever that it will do either, and despite knowledge of proven alternative approaches which are cheaper and will definitely do both. And I'm bothered about it. I guess I'm just funny like that. We all have our quirks I suppose. — Isaac
At my hospital they stopped doing elective surgeries during the blitz and devoted surgical ICUs to COVID. We just started doing that again. Space isn't an issue for us because we're gigantic. Staffing limits our capacity. That's true across the country. — frank
You can stock basics (although we use plastic, which means all that stuff has expiration dates), but we learn from the disease what we need in terms of supportive equipment. — frank
If ebola evolved into something less deadly and more transmissible, we don't know if we would need ventilators. We'll have to find out if it happens. — frank
So this is mostly wrong, but I've talked to you about it before, and I don't see any reason to go through it again. — frank
Not if you paid for an emerging disease monitoring service, had an efficient manufacturing chain on standby, had excess staffing in both medical services and medical supply services, had a contingency plan to cover all this (oh, and avoided having a clown for a president). Then you might stand a chance of finding out just before it happens (in your country). — Isaac
He immediately answered the Covid-19 pandemic and, as a 12-year old, was happy that he had experience something really historic in his lifetime. — ssu
These prior diseases fell into the category of "nasty flus". — ssu
Most years, the US death toll from the flu is closer to 34,000 to 43,000. Globally, the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that the flu kills 290,000 to 650,000 people per year.
That we weren't prepared is nothing short of criminal. — Isaac
It's a completely predictable part of living so close together. That we weren't prepared is nothing short of criminal. — Isaac
You can read dozens of articles and many documentaries that were done prior to Covid-19 warning about what could happen. — ssu
Who are the criminals, the doctors, scientists, or those ignorant politicians? — magritte
Maybe viruses are just too smart for us, they can mutate in a day but it takes the best science much of a year to fight back. — magritte
Another test. One case in Perth. Two million people locked down for five days. — Banno
The lockdown in Perth and the surrounding area followed similar efforts in Brisbane and Sydney, where a handful of infections led to steep ramp-ups in restrictions, a subdued virus and a rapid return to near normalcy. Ask Australians about the approach, and they might just shrug. Instead of loneliness and grief or outcries over impingements on their freedom, they’ve gotten used to a routine of short-term pain for collective gain.
...
“We have a way to save lives, open up our economies and avoid all this fear and hassle,” said Ian Mackay, a virologist at the University of Queensland who developed a multilayered, or “Swiss cheese,” model of pandemic defense that has been widely circulated. “Everyone can learn from us, but not all are willing to learn.”
...
Australia’s geographic isolation offers it one great advantage. Still, it has taken a number of decisive steps. Australia has strictly limited interstate travel while mandating hotel quarantine for international arrivals since last March. Britain and the United States are only now seeking to make quarantine mandatory for people coming from coronavirus hot spots.
Australia has also maintained a strong system of contact tracing, even as other countries have essentially given up. In the Perth case, contact tracers had already tested the man’s housemates (negative so far) by the time the lockdown was announced and placed them under 14-day quarantine at a state-run facility. The authorities also listed more than a dozen locations where the security guard might have touched or breathed on someone.
...
Dr. Mackay, who has worked closely with Australian government officials, called it “the hammer and the dance.”
— One Case, Total Lockdown: Australia’s Lessons for a Pandemic World
Apparently Perth's lockdown worked. No new cases, lockdown finishes in a few hours. — Banno
anyone care to point to flaws in this approach?
I can;t see any and think it would work well, I don't see it ever actually being followed due to its complexity. — dazed
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.