Yeah, but has he taken into account the timing of the ski holidays?
When your mate is beating you 5-0 on FIFA and you say “right I’m going to start playing now”.
I was talking to a doctor the other day who said we should scrap the regional government level, and just have national government and comunes. I tend to agree with him. This crisis was handled best when there was a very specific response to outbreaks in defined areas, in my view, and mayors can be there doing what's necessary in the city, town or village they know best. It must also cost a fortune to have that layer of regional bureaucracy.Yes, much more so. It is also a lot more split North v South which has led to further controversy with these reopenings. The Northern regions probably should stay closed a little longer, but the 4 worst hit regions in the North contribute 50% of the national GDP and their governors are saying we pay for you all so you have to let us in.
I think most of Europe is pretty stable at a couple of hundred new cases per day, and the testing/treatment infrastructure is all there to quickly get on top of any outbreaks. I don't see a huge difference in moving between countries vs moving between regions. The only countries i wish would be excluded is the UK and possibly Sweden as neither seem totally on top of things yet.
Weird way to interpret his own graph. I’d say that shows an obvious VE day spike, exactly where you would expect to see it, May 17th - 23rd.
Less dramatic when you go with 7 day average, which was never going to be the best way to identify the consequences of just one day of stupid behaviour.
I was talking to a doctor the other day who said we should scrap the regional government level, and just have national government and comunes. I tend to agree with him. This crisis was handled best when there was a very specific response to outbreaks in defined areas, in my view, and mayors can be there doing what's necessary in the city, town or village they know best. It must also cost a fortune to have that layer of regional bureaucracy.
I'd say you're over-analysing the noise there. It's a similar daily variation to the rest of the graph.
I do think there's been a bit of over-excitied pronunciations of coming second waves with every picture of people outside, and I worry that we'll have wave-fatigue by the time any actual second wave does emerge (probably as we start going back to work, and spending more time on public transport and indoors with other people).
I was talking to a doctor the other day who said we should scrap the regional government level, and just have national government and comunes. I tend to agree with him. This crisis was handled best when there was a very specific response to outbreaks in defined areas, in my view, and mayors can be there doing what's necessary in the city, town or village they know best. It must also cost a fortune to have that layer of regional bureaucracy.
That's true, and as @11101 says, it provides thousands of safe government jobs. If you get a government pension here, it apparently isn't taken into account as income when you do your tax return. I only know this because I have an NHS pension which is classed in the same way here for our Italian tax liability. I was surprised.Ha, no way people will surrender power especially Italians. They love a uniform and an office.
Polite but brutal. He is basically saying that their data is garbage and probably deliberately so, so as to not to reveal how bad a job they have done and are doing.
They were testing incoming passengers' temperatures at Italian airports as far back as mid-Feb - my sister had a weekend in Rome then and was checked.
From today in Italy we are free to travel anywhere in the country, having been confined to our own regions for the last couple of weeks. They waited until today because it was a public holiday here yesterday. Personally, I would have like inter-region travelling to have excluded Lombardy and one or two other northern regions, but there's been a lot of pressure exerted on the government by the bosses of those regions. Some southern regions have said they'll bring in their own measures to ban people coming from high-risk areas.
Yes, much more so. It is also a lot more split North v South which has led to further controversy with these reopenings. The Northern regions probably should stay closed a little longer, but the 4 worst hit regions in the North contribute 50% of the national GDP and their governors are saying we pay for you all so you have to let us in.
I think most of Europe is pretty stable at a couple of hundred new cases per day, and the testing/treatment infrastructure is all there to quickly get on top of any outbreaks. I don't see a huge difference in moving between countries vs moving between regions. The only countries i wish would be excluded is the UK and possibly Sweden as neither seem totally on top of things yet.
Yeah, but has he taken into account the timing of the ski holidays?
As per usual I did not make my point as well as I might have. I have no issue with countries that seem to be getting the pandemic under control welcoming foreign travellers. It just struck me as terribly idiotic for the Italian government to be welcoming U.K. residents at this stage given that we still seem to have a way to go before we have a handle on it. On an aside note was I mistaken or did I dream it but I thought I heard on today’s news - no links - that it was being suggested that temperature taking was is not now being considered effective which U.K. airports were banking on?
You make your points very well! I don't see that temperature-taking at UK airports makes a massive difference really, because everyone's got to do a quarantine (allegedly), and will be randomly visited to make sure they're doing it. However, on the other hand you'll still be able to go out for foodAs per usual I did not make my point as well as I might have. I have no issue with countries that seem to be getting the pandemic under control welcoming foreign travellers. It just struck me as terribly idiotic for the Italian government to be welcoming U.K. residents at this stage given that we still seem to have a way to go before we have a handle on it. On an aside note was I mistaken or did I dream it but I thought I heard on today’s news - no links - that it was being suggested that temperature taking was is not now being considered effective which U.K. airports were banking on?
I'd say you're over-analysing the noise there. It's a similar daily variation to the rest of the graph.
I do think there's been a bit of over-excitied pronunciations of coming second waves with every picture of people outside, and I worry that we'll have wave-fatigue by the time any actual second wave does emerge (probably as we start going back to work, and spending more time on public transport and indoors with other people).
As per usual I did not make my point as well as I might have. I have no issue with countries that seem to be getting the pandemic under control welcoming foreign travellers. It just struck me as terribly idiotic for the Italian government to be welcoming U.K. residents at this stage given that we still seem to have a way to go before we have a handle on it. On an aside note was I mistaken or did I dream it but I thought I heard on today’s news - no links - that it was being suggested that temperature taking was is not now being considered effective which U.K. airports were banking on?
The problem is the infectious pre-symptomatic stage. Plenty of infectious people won't have a temperature, so they'll pass right through. Ideally we'd have a test that you could turn around in a couple of hours, so you could swab people at check-in and know by the time they landed if they were infectious. You'd probably have to quarantine all their fellow passengers though, and maybe any airport staff that spent more than a few minutes with them - the check in desk, anyone in security who patted them down, the booze sample person in duty free...
Interesting news regarding Ibuprofen - a unique formulation is being trialled now in double-blinded multicentered randomised control trial with 230 patients due to "compelling" pre-clinical (as far as I can see unpublished) data that suggests benefits in terms of respiratory failure (and if it does lowers ventilation rate, hospital stay presumably)
https://www.kcl.ac.uk/news/trial-te...ation-of-ibuprofen-to-treat-covid-19-launches
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/study/NCT04334629
Really annoyed with how we jumped the gun earlier after that French Health Ministers advice and the BMJ and a few others expressing caution against it use. Which I was iffy about but went along with given how novel covid was. Ibuprofen is great for short term use as analgesia, anti-pyretic yet I remember the nightmare it was with calpol and paracetamol available nowhere at its peak yet the ibuprofen stacks were full when it may have provided feverish patients some symptomatic relief.
Not sure if the study will find much but good to keep an eye out on
I don't think it really matters too much, as there are barely any flights running and the 14 day quarantine will stop anybody wanting to leave the UK.
Temperature checks have always been a bit pointless. I don't know why they thought it was going to be a silver bullet.
Apparently follows a lot of offices reopening.
FFS.
My wife has a special interest in lupus and prescribes a fair bit amount of hydroxychloroquine to her derm patients for a few things and said never noticed arrythmias as a serious problemFFS.
I'm supposed to be working and that's a long read, but what is it saying? Surgisphere purposely manipulated the results for some reason or it was just a poorly done study that was jumped on by mass media?
I'm supposed to be working and that's a long read, but what is it saying? Surgisphere purposely manipulated the results for some reason or it was just a poorly done study that was jumped on by mass media?
A Guardian investigation can reveal the US-based company Surgisphere, whose handful of employees appear to include a science fiction writer and an adult-content model, has provided data for multiple studies on Covid-19 co-authored by its chief executive, but has so far failed to adequately explain its data or methodology.
A search of publicly available material suggests several of Surgisphere’s employees have little or no data or scientific background. An employee listed as a science editor appears to be a science fiction author and fantasy artist. Another employee listed as a marketing executive is an adult model and events hostess.
Apparently follows a lot of offices reopening.
Good to see The Lancet taken down a peg or two. People were deferring to its editor’s views with lax scrutiny at the start of the pandemic.
They're idiots:The RKI report for Germany overall is still suggesting that R is 0.9. Is there an explanation for why it would be so much higher in Berlin?
Anyone who travelled to Lombardy in February could tell you that. I went mid February and temperature tests were being rigourously done in Malpensa airport and it turned out to be about as much use as a chocolate fireguard.it was being suggested that temperature taking was is not now being considered effective
Exactly, it only stops people who already have a temperature and usually those people stay home because they're sick.Anyone who travelled to Lombardy in February could tell you that. I went mid February and temperature tests were being rigourously done in Malpensa airport and it turned out to be about as much use as a chocolate fireguard.
A further 359 deaths (reported) in UK (wouldnt be surprised if number is actually bigger)
Yet Boris looks so proud of that number.
Death rate is higher now than when we went into lockdown right?