It would be like adding a 100 doors to every building on the off chance everyone wants to leave at once on any given day. — Cheshire
Beds occupied by Covid-19 patients currently stand at about 2,500 out of 115,000 beds (source https://www.england.nhs.uk/statistics/statistical-work-areas/covid-19-hospital-activity/), about 2% of activity. About 20% of those 115,000 beds are occupied by those with avoidable illness (source https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/healthandsocialcare/causesofdeath/bulletins/avoidablemortalityinenglandandwales/latest). — Isaac
You just extrapolated from the hospital conditions on your island to support an argument that spans the globe. Make that make sense. I'll wait.So we take your absurd example derived from your hysterical guesswork, add some real figures from, you know, actually checking the fucking facts, and we find you're off by a factor of two thousand. — Isaac
There's no way to be constantly ready for a pandemic. — frank
No one, literally no one, blames the crisis on hesitancy for a vaccine that didn't exist. You must wear very high boots in order to safely walk around in this much bullshit.Thirdly, I'm not, nor ever would be, advocating not using other forms if intervention - lockdowns, masks, sanitation, vaccines... I've never advocated just letting it rip. What I'm opposed to is the narrative which hides all of the massive societal failings which brought this crisis about under the blanket of vaccine hesitancy. — Isaac
You just extrapolated from the hospital conditions on your island to support an argument that spans the globe. Make that make sense. I'll wait.
My house is on fire! Can't be because mine isn't. — Cheshire
An increase of only half the entire capacity? So, just make it 150% of what's available. Did I mention doormen were required. It's the same in regards to how practical it is as an undertaking.Even without taking any other public health action your 100 extra doors example is out by a thousand fold. In the US, it's half a door extra. — Isaac
No one, literally no one, blames the crisis on hesitancy for a vaccine that didn't exist. — Cheshire
An increase of only half the entire capacity? So, just make it 150% of what's available. — Cheshire
Even without taking any other public health action...why we would assume that, I don't know — Isaac
disagree. For a start, emerging pathogen monitoring was cut to the bone, it should never have been. Emergency measures were drafted but not acted on. Both would have dramatically reduced infection rates, as can be seen in the countries which acted more quickly than others. — Isaac
Secondly, still over 90% of ICU admissions have pre-existing comorbidities. We know from the preventable disease study I've already cited that better community healthcare can more than half ICU occupation. — Isaac
F-that monkey noise. Tell me why your quoting British figures and trying to tell me something.Really? You're still persisting? Did you even check the figures, or did you , again, just presume I must be wrong because the telly says so? — Isaac
Oh, and England in the 80s had double the hospital capacity we have now. It's not hard. — Isaac
Your perspective is afflicted by a disconnection with the real world. — frank
That sounds absurd — frank
What you're suggesting is that my hospital could pay nurses, therapists, pharmacists, secretaries, central supply employees, intensivists, radiologists, cardiologists, neurologists, surgeons, orderlies, and me to stay at home until the next pandemic. — frank
It turns out people have to actually take the vaccines.Besides, as Cheshire was so delighted to pretend I didn't say, I'm not suggesting a need to double normal capacity (though we could), increasing capacity is one of a number of things which need going, including better community healthcare, hygiene, lockdowns and vaccines. — Isaac
They weren't initially; nor is the one posted to support the claim. Which isn't quoted here.Tell me why your quoting British figures and trying to tell me something.
— Cheshire
They're American figures there. Read first, comment second — Isaac
Oh, and England in the 80s had double the hospital capacity we have now. It's not hard. — Isaac
To a pandemic? But, that requires quick production of a vaccine. If there's not enough data about something that was produced just recently; people will pretend it's deficient. And we'll have to use a business with access to vast resources. All of them are evil for some reason.I think vaccination is an excellent public policy response in general. — Isaac
To a pandemic? — Cheshire
But, that requires quick production of a vaccine. If there's not enough data about something that was produced just recently; people will pretend it's deficient. — Cheshire
And we'll have to use a business with access to vast resources. — Cheshire
All of them are evil for some reason. — Cheshire
Really? Why do you think that 'sounds absurd'? — Isaac
And we'll have to use a business with access to vast resources.
— Cheshire
Why? — Isaac
But, that requires quick production of a vaccine. — Cheshire
This is a different thread.Pretty evil, yes. I'd call restricting access to a life-saving vaccine and thereby leading to thousands of deaths evil. The head of the WHO seems to agree likening it to "apartheid". Why, do you think that's just OK behaviour? — Isaac
Are you sure you weren't looking at hospital admissions vs ICU admissions? — frank
You asked why a large corporation is necessary for the production of a large quantity of vaccine in a short time frame; by implication of suggesting a vaccine is a proper response to a pandemic.To make a lot of something fast requires many something makers.
— Cheshire
Does it? — Isaac
You did. It's essentially a child asking to mail his vegetables to Africa in regards to how it relates to this discussion.You brought it up. — Isaac
Granted.I wish. — Isaac
Thank you :flower:Discussions, concerns and admonishments have been appreciated. — 180 Proof
Beds occupied by Covid-19 patients currently stand at about 2,500 out of 115,000 beds — Isaac
Covid occupancy in the US 1,800 out of 13,000 beds — Isaac
I don't see how that article supported your claim. Could you point it out specifically? — frank
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