Insiders told BuzzFeed News that the scientific advice from the government's experts still dictated that now was not the right time to implement a full-scale lockdown. They insisted that they would be guided by the science and take the appropriate measures if and when they become necessary.
Decentralised care sounds like a great idea, but I wonder how hard it is to implement? Partially implementing it is what I guess might be possible.Avoid hospitals if you can. And healthcare workers need good personal protection and disinfection routines.
The opposite would be to eliminate the virus - this will not work anymore, you would need to do the hole world quarantine for two weeks minimum.Or are we still on the herd immunity plan?
Now there are 8 confirmed cases linked to the ski-resorttoday there has been news articles about a confirmed case at one of the largest ski-resorts, someone who reportedly went to a popular après-ski eventMeanwhile, on the other side of the border, Norwegian ski-resorts have reportedly already closed for the time being.
The doctors from Bergamo published this letter in NEJM Catalyst https://catalyst.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/CAT.20.0080Avoid hospitals if you can. And healthcare workers need good personal protection and disinfection routines.
This disaster could be averted only by massive deployment of outreach services. Pandemic solutionsare required for the entire population, not only for hospitals. Home care and mobile clinics avoid unnecessary movements and release pressure from hospitals.2 Early oxygen therapy, pulse oximeters, and nutrition can be delivered to the homes of mildly ill and convalescent patients, setting up a broad surveillance system with adequate isolation and leveraging innovative telemedicine instruments. This approach would limit hospitalization to a focused target of disease severity, thereby decreasing contagion, protecting patients and health care workers, and minimizing consumption of protective equipment. [...] This outbreak is more than an intensive care phenomenon, rather it is a public health and humanitarian crisis.
Coronavirus is the Ebola of the rich and requires a coordinated transnational effort. It is not particularly lethal, but it is very contagious. The more medicalized and centralized the society, the more widespread the virus. This catastrophe unfolding in wealthy Lombardy could happen anywhere.
New Buzzfeed article which presents it as the government's scientific advisors being opposed to stronger measures on social distancing:
https://www.buzzfeed.com/alexwickham/boris-johnson-coronavirus-lockdown-cabinet-mutiny
“Insiders told BuzzFeed News that the scientific advice from the government's experts still dictated that now was not the right time to implement a full-scale lockdown. They insisted that they would be guided by the science and take the appropriate measures if and when they become necessary.”
Im sorry if I’ve missed it over the past few days, or if someone’s posted this already and I’ve forgotten. Has anyone managed to dig out which part of the “science” they are using, is telling them when to delay or why? And what the “right time” would be?
I note Vallance shared the research that has been published (I haven’t gone through this):
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/...vidence-supporting-the-uk-government-response
The opposite would be to eliminate the virus - this will not work anymore, you would need to do the hole world quarantine for two weeks minimum.
So the question is what the right speed of spreading will be, so that everybody who can be saved will be saved and the hospitals will not be overwhelmed. Another factor is to gain time for the development of medicals and vaccination, if this could succeed in some time.
Nobody knows the right speed, nobody knows the ratio between severe cases (and deaths) and real infections. Obviously the different numbers from different countries are not comparable.
I'm guessing this is the article you mean?Edit: There is an excellent article circulating called 'Hammer and Dance' that explains the detail of this.
https://medium.com/@tomaspueyo/coronavirus-the-hammer-and-the-dance-be9337092b56
Listening to Talk Radio this morning, the presenter and some of her guests are saying that the government plan is still aiming to develop herd immunity, but just slowly to protect the most vulnerable. The presenter said that this is what all other countries are doing, but just not admitting to it. She keeps talking about how the government are and always have been 'following the science' and people (including other 'armchair' scientists) should stop criticising what our leader have been and are doing. So the herd immunity idea is still very much alive in the British public's conciousness.I agree with @lunarainbows that the government still seem to be in a slowly-slowly mindset that makes no sense. The WHO does not take that view as fas as I can see. The stupidity of the UK advisors seems mind-blowing.
I'm guessing this is the article you mean?
Has the UK government actually come out and said that are completely wrong about herd immunity, that no one knows whether recovered people develop long term immunity?
Pleased to hear that ...but the WHO situation report for 22 March says 82 confirmed new cases reported. Which is still amazingly good (1% of the total number of cases and less each day).CNN just reported that Wuhan, China reports no new cases for the last 5 days.