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While we wait for Johnson’s “road map” is Carrie the one who is really in charge? – politicalbetting

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  • Given that the data was apparently collected between 8 December and 15 February, there is a rather simple explanation for why we don't have data for longer periods....
    Indeed, but they do for Pfizer.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205
    Gaussian said:

    https://twitter.com/EdConwaySky/status/1363806457729343488

    The 95% CI for the 94% number is 73 to 99, and is based on two events.
    It's a bit hard to make sense of without the full paper, but a 6 week efficacy of around 60% is about what was predicted.
  • MaxPB said:

    And yet the MHRA, EMA and WHO approved it for all ages. So that's just bullshit really isn't it. The EU's own regulator has given it full approval and it's the politicians that have undermined it. The politicians you seem to be defending because your love of the EU has blinded you to just how many are going to die because of their words and actions that have led to people rejecting a vaccine that is highly effective.
    Precisely.

    Had the EMA said no that would have been fair enough. They didn't.

    Instead the undermining came from the same people who were desperately trying to get their hands on it days earlier.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,351
    Roger said:

    A characteristically cerebral comment.
    Macron descended into Trumpian-level fake news. I'm surprised you would defend him.
  • JonathanDJonathanD Posts: 2,400
    edited February 2021
    MaxPB said:

    And yet the MHRA, EMA and WHO approved it for all ages. So that's just bullshit really isn't it. The EU's own regulator has given it full approval and it's the politicians that have undermined it. The politicians you seem to be defending because your love of the EU has blinded you to just how many are going to die because of their words and actions that have led to people rejecting a vaccine that is highly effective.

    The AZ Phase III trial had problems with dosing variations and under recruitment of older trial subjects.

    Both of these issues seem to have arisen because of the relative inexperience of Oxford University and AZ in vaccine development / manufacture.

    I don't think there is any dispute that Moderna and Pfizer ran better trials - remember AZ still hasn't been licensed in the US, so the problem is not just to do with the EU being nasty.

    AZ and Oxford however deserve lots of praise for the pricing of their vaccine however.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,440
    Scott_xP said:

    From the Times


    Are we supposed to recognise any of them except other than Carrie and Boris and the peeing lapdog who must be Hancock?
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,915

    I think it's a super idea myself, though this is the first time I've seen the Manx Interchange plan. Seems a bit of a weird one, as you have to go well out of your way to get from Scotland to NI and vice versa (though I assume it must still be quicker than the ferry).
    Tunnelling is a lot cheaper than it used to be.

    One big problem might be solved if there was a requirement for all vehicles entering the tunnel to be electric, although fires would still be an issue. The Mont Blanc fire is not something anyone would want to repeat.

  • RobD said:

    Macron descended into Trumpian-level fake news. I'm surprised you would defend him.
    You are?

    I'm not.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,181

    It's often more important to be correct than cerebral.
    Call me crazy, but when asked about the efficacy of vaccines, all politicians in all countries should point to a senior medical person and say - "Ask him/her about the published, peer reviewed science".
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,351

    You are?

    I'm not.
    Maybe you replied to the wrong comment?
  • Roger said:

    Are we supposed to recognise any of them except other than Carrie and Boris and the peeing lapdog who must be Hancock?
    Gove on the right hand side of the three?

    The middle one looks like Blackford to me, but he shouldn't be a courtier surely?
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited February 2021
    RobD said:

    Maybe you replied to the wrong comment?
    No. I'm not surprised Roger would defend Trumpian-levels of fake news so long as it comes from the French.

    So long as it comes from the French and has no connection whatsoever to Hartlepool then Roger doesn't care about Trumpianism.
  • Hungary flattered by 2 days data:

    https://www.politico.eu/coronavirus-in-europe/


  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,205

    Indeed, but they do for Pfizer.
    I think the early pfizers would have had a 3 week booster, so interesting, but not comparable.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,351

    No. I'm not surprised Roger would defend Trumpian-levels of fake news so long as it comes from the French.

    So long as it comes from the French and has no connection whatsoever to Hartlepool then Roger doesn't care about Trumpianism.
    Ah, I understand now. Sorry!
  • JonathanDJonathanD Posts: 2,400



    The middle one looks like Blackford to me, but he shouldn't be a courtier surely?
    Frost?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,457
    edited February 2021
    LOL...

    Contestant on 'Icelandic University Challenge' throws a strop and storms off set after rival team answers winning question

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9285779/Contestant-Icelandic-University-Challenge-storms-set.html
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,005
    Scott_xP said:
    Good luck with that one.

    The question to ask the DUP never changes: We know what you don't want. What do you want? It is a question they will never answer and whole political careers have been built on it. It is time to call their bluff.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,188

    I still don't really understand the logic of keeping "non-essential" retail closed. Like why is it less risky to go down a cramped Tesco aisle compared to a cramped H&M aisle? Both sell clothes, just one also sells food.

    It is a nonsense.

    Didn't someone from SAGE even say that closing/opening NE retail has an almost zero effect on case numbers....?
  • Foxy said:

    I think the early pfizers would have had a 3 week booster, so interesting, but not comparable.
    Good point. It's certainly something which needs to be taken into account. If there were many two-dose subjects in the study, then from the Israeli results we might have expected better figures for Pfizer (although the error bars are large).
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited February 2021
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,309
    Sandpit said:


    So long as it has something stamped in the windscreen, and export paperwork from the origin country, I reckon I could get plates for it out here. They have full light clusters and a speedo, would just need some tyres and be good to go!

    You're supposed to be able to get Saudi plates on just about fucking anything with the right contacts. Somebody did Gumball right across Europe in a Lambo powered Dark Knight era Batmobile replica by this artifice.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,253
    Foxy said:

    It's a bit hard to make sense of without the full paper, but a 6 week efficacy of around 60% is about what was predicted.
    Yep, it'll be good to see the whole thing. Efficacy estimates appear to come from the propensity adjusted figures, so it will be interesting to see what's in the propensity model and the detail they have on that. And whether it differs to the model used in for the English data, assuming they take a similar approach.

    (For those not into this kind of analysis, this is not a randomised trial, so comparisons have to take into account other risk factors - age, obviously, but also e.g. regional differences in infections which might matter if there are regional differences in vaccinations. There are many ways of doing that, depending partly on the data available on those other risk factors)
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,817
    Foxy said:

    I think the early pfizers would have had a 3 week booster, so interesting, but not comparable.
    I don't think that's the case in Scotland only around 5k second doses were given up to that point.
  • RH1992RH1992 Posts: 788

    LOL...

    Contestant on 'Icelandic University Challenge' throws a strop and storms off set after rival team answers winning question

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9285779/Contestant-Icelandic-University-Challenge-storms-set.html

    Looks like Dave Keating received more positive UK vaccine news that he's going to have to spin.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,290
    TOPPING said:

    Something that many on PB simply wouldn't have a clue about.

    Is the NHS going to be overwhelmed? No? Then open up more.

    Although we are now as a matter of weeks away I see, as you do, no great harm in waiting, having come this far. But with that comes the danger that, like the pot of gold, it is always just out of reach.

    I have been saying, literally, will no one think of the children, from an intellectual rather than emotional perspective, such as I possess one of the former. I gave the example of a six-yr old in July who, if they persist, will have been living with restrictions for 25% of their lives. That is shocking in concept enough.

    But what really hit home was @Isam's post saying his 15-month old hadn't had any social contact with anyone outside their family. Quite extraordinary.
    Sorry if I misled, he did go to baby massage classes and see some other children pre lockdown, although he was only four months then, and in the late summer we had a weekend away with friends their kids, in Hampshire. He loved it! But probably only about four or five interactions with other kids since last March and none since November.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    Hungary flattered by 2 days data:

    https://www.politico.eu/coronavirus-in-europe/


    Why not post the death per million data too?
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,078
    edited February 2021

    Gove on the right hand side of the three?

    The middle one looks like Blackford to me, but he shouldn't be a courtier surely?
    I think the middle one is Frost

    EDIT Second
  • glwglw Posts: 10,359
    It's not just in the EU, in Australia there have been complaints about the plan to use the AZ vaccine because of the crap spread about AZ by European politicians.
  • Why not post the death per million data too?
    Do your own charts. If you'd bothered to follow the link you'd see that's the data thats there.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,351

    Why not post the death per million data too?

    Why not post the death per million data too?
    No one is stopping you.
  • Why not post the death per million data too?
    Because that data is historical, relatively meaningless and notoriously inaccurate.

    The UK is actually counting deaths and testing for them properly. Most other countries are underreporting, some quite dramatically.

    So why would you be posting that? Its the vaccines that matter. They're the route out, they're the "endgame", they're the way to prevent future deaths.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822
    edited February 2021
    deleted
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,817
    glw said:

    It's not just in the EU, in Australia there have been complaints about the plan to use the AZ vaccine because of the crap spread about AZ by European politicians.
    Soft headed by the Australians in that case. Hopefully today's data release will help to undo a lot of that damage from Macron and others in Europe.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,793
    Andy_JS said:
    For those outside the paywall, the argument is that we won't get back to the old economy - not that we won't get back to the old life. It's the old saws about wfh becoming increasingly important and all that that implies.
    To which I'd reply, well, probably. But that was going to happen anyway. And the extent to which it does happen is unclear.
    Meanwhile, the consensus of planning and investment decisions in Manchester still seems to be expecting to need more office space. I think this is based on increase in jobs outweighing the shift to wfh. But really, there's a lot of guesswork associated with these predictions.

  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    Because that data is historical, relatively meaningless and notoriously inaccurate.

    The UK is actually counting deaths and testing for them properly. Most other countries are underreporting, some quite dramatically.

    So why would you be posting that? Its the vaccines that matter. They're the route out, they're the "endgame", they're the way to prevent future deaths.
    Excess deaths is also a shitshow though


    Counting those wrong like March 8th is 3 weeks after mid April
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,276
    Cookie said:

    For those outside the paywall, the argument is that we won't get back to the old economy - not that we won't get back to the old life. It's the old saws about wfh becoming increasingly important and all that that implies.
    To which I'd reply, well, probably. But that was going to happen anyway. And the extent to which it does happen is unclear.
    Meanwhile, the consensus of planning and investment decisions in Manchester still seems to be expecting to need more office space. I think this is based on increase in jobs outweighing the shift to wfh. But really, there's a lot of guesswork associated with these predictions.

    Using Opera browser beats the paywall.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    RobD said:

    No one is stopping you.
    UK is worst in the World of all Nations with a population over 11.6m

    I thought you knew Rob

    But according to you its all down to Demographics
  • Excess deaths is also a shitshow though


    Counting those wrong like March 8th is 3 weeks after mid April
    Excess deaths is wrong? How?

    That literally shows who is alive and who is dead. It shows fewer excess deaths than total deaths in the UK which makes sense, while almost every other nation is the other way around. So your "per million" chart is meaningless garbage and you know it.

    What matters, the only thing that matters really now, is vaccinations.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    isam said:

    Sorry if I misled, he did go to baby massage classes and see some other children pre lockdown, although he was only four months then, and in the late summer we had a weekend away with friends their kids, in Hampshire. He loved it! But probably only about four or five interactions with other kids since last March and none since November.
    That's still pretty shocking; I'm sure he will hoover up all and every interaction once he is able but that is a cost of this lockdown. For him an extra month is a non-trivial part of his life. An extra five months (to July as many seem to be saying/happy with) of restrictions, a huge amount.
  • UK is worst in the World of all Nations with a population over 11.6m

    I thought you knew Rob

    But according to you its all down to Demographics
    That is a lie and you know it.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,817

    Excess deaths is also a shitshow though


    Counting those wrong like March 8th is 3 weeks after mid April
    How is excess deaths a "shitshow" they are the single most reliable statistic for gauging prior infection rates. The reason they are difficult to compare right now is because other countries are obfuscating and hiding their excess deaths data, that will change as national statistics bodies catch up and the political heat goes away.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    Excess deaths is wrong? How?

    That literally shows who is alive and who is dead. It shows fewer excess deaths than total deaths in the UK which makes sense, while almost every other nation is the other way around. So your "per million" chart is meaningless garbage and you know it.

    What matters, the only thing that matters really now, is vaccinations.
    Deaths don't matter


    At least you are honest
  • Dunno how reliable this thread is, although it seems plausible. If it's right, the US had an even narrower escape than we thought:

    https://twitter.com/LiteraryMouse/status/1363755036967374848
  • Deaths don't matter


    At least you are honest
    Deaths happen in a pandemic. Everybody dies eventually.

    The UK's excess deaths numbers per million are much, much lower than some other large countries and overall will probably be pretty average once all is said and done.

    What matters is ending the pandemic so no more die. That's vaccines.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    MaxPB said:

    How is excess deaths a "shitshow" they are the single most reliable statistic for gauging prior infection rates. The reason they are difficult to compare right now is because other countries are obfuscating and hiding their excess deaths data, that will change as national statistics bodies catch up and the political heat goes away.
    Yeah right.
  • JonathanDJonathanD Posts: 2,400

    Dunno how reliable this thread is, although it seems plausible. If it's right, the US had an even narrower escape than we thought:

    https://twitter.com/LiteraryMouse/status/1363755036967374848

    Is the easier answer not that they were insurrectionists but rather that they were a bunch of hooligans on a day trip?
  • Why don't you tell us some more about how ineffective AZN is? You were quite big on that until recently.
    He hates the fact the UK is doing a good job and would rather see more of his own compatriots die than have the pandemic end.

    Its quite sickening really.
  • logical_songlogical_song Posts: 10,033
    algarkirk said:

    Good luck with that one.

    The question to ask the DUP never changes: We know what you don't want. What do you want? It is a question they will never answer and whole political careers have been built on it. It is time to call their bluff.
    We are where we are in part because of the DUP and their money.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,251
    Sandpit said:

    So long as it has something stamped in the windscreen, and export paperwork from the origin country, I reckon I could get plates for it out here. They have full light clusters and a speedo, would just need some tyres and be good to go!
    Off Topic

    I registered an old Vauxhall Vectra for use in Galicia in 2007. It wasn't that easy, apart from the paperwork an inspection was required, headlights had to be changed to those from an LHD car and all tyres had to have the same speed rating, so no mixing H and Vs, among a long list of other minor impositions.

    That said, it was easier than registering a Japanese import with the DVLA. An SVA report would have been handy, but at £150 a pop, I did all my own research. Proving the car's exact age was a trial, particularly as the car was a Rover Group product and the liquidators of MG Rover destroyed all the production records. You would have no chance of registering a car with a Motorsport VIN in the UK, even if it had been road registered elsewhere.

    Of course using an alternative VIN would be very illegal.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,290
    TOPPING said:

    That's still pretty shocking; I'm sure he will hoover up all and every interaction once he is able but that is a cost of this lockdown. For him an extra month is a non-trivial part of his life. An extra five months (to July as many seem to be saying/happy with) of restrictions, a huge amount.
    Yes, the sooner the better.
  • Carolus_RexCarolus_Rex Posts: 1,414
    edited February 2021
    TOPPING said:

    That's still pretty shocking; I'm sure he will hoover up all and every interaction once he is able but that is a cost of this lockdown. For him an extra month is a non-trivial part of his life. An extra five months (to July as many seem to be saying/happy with) of restrictions, a huge amount.
    I don't think we have any idea how much damage is being done to very young children. I have client whose child was born in April last year. Only child in a single parent household. She'll have spent practically all her first year of life isolated from any direct human contact other than her mother. On the rate occasions when she meets th one friend in her mother's support bubble, she screams. Hopefully she'll bounce back from this in time but who knows?
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Cookie said:

    For those outside the paywall, the argument is that we won't get back to the old economy - not that we won't get back to the old life. It's the old saws about wfh becoming increasingly important and all that that implies.
    To which I'd reply, well, probably. But that was going to happen anyway. And the extent to which it does happen is unclear.
    Meanwhile, the consensus of planning and investment decisions in Manchester still seems to be expecting to need more office space. I think this is based on increase in jobs outweighing the shift to wfh. But really, there's a lot of guesswork associated with these predictions.

    Timothy also falls into the old trap of "ah there will be fewer commuters, so fewer restaurants and more city centre housing" not realising that this is circular – if you increase residence in city centres you also increase demand for services e.g. restaurants!
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,309
    glw said:

    It's not just in the EU, in Australia there have been complaints about the plan to use the AZ vaccine because of the crap spread about AZ by European politicians.
    I saw somebody on Discord say, 'Oxford? Is that the fucking shit one?' Xaxaxa, as the Russians say.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    edited February 2021

    I don't think we have any idea how much damage is being done to very young children. I have client whose child was born in April last year. Only child in a single parent household. She'll have spent practically all her adult life isolated from any direct human contact other than her mother. On the rate occasions when she meets th one friend in her mother's support bubble, she screams. Hopefully she'll bounce back from this in time but who knows?
    Absolutely.

    And as I have said previously, my sister (three children - older now school/uni) put it like this: hopefully they are young enough to get over it; and not so young for it to be formative.

    At what age is this optimised? No f***ing clue.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,161

    Bollocks.

    A letter from lawyers was sent demanding actions and demanding payment of £2,500. That's legal action.

    It may not be courts, but getting lawyers to demand £2,500 off someone is legal action. What else would you call it? An invoice for services rendered?
    Personally I would call it bullying. And those holding elected office should not do it. Period.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,009
    edited February 2021
    algarkirk said:

    Good luck with that one.

    The question to ask the DUP never changes: We know what you don't want. What do you want? It is a question they will never answer and whole political careers have been built on it. It is time to call their bluff.
    What they want is for the border to be in Ireland not the Irish Sea, Foster knows she cannot say that publicly now but if Unionist parties combined got a majority at Stormont next year ie DUP + UUP + TUV, that is what they would likely push for.

    Otherwise it would need a closer alignment to EEA rules by the whole UK to remove the Irish Sea border, which would require a PM Starmer in 2024
  • ozymandiasozymandias Posts: 1,503

    Deaths don't matter


    At least you are honest
    On a long enough time line I'm afraid to inform you that the mortality rate for all humans is 100%.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    On foreign travel, nearly all the statistics give the number of trips but give no indication of how many are the same people going abroad more than once.
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,600
    JonathanD said:

    Is the easier answer not that they were insurrectionists but rather that they were a bunch of hooligans on a day trip?
    Hooligans on a day trip don’t bring flex-cuffs, radios & bear spray to the party.
  • On a long enough time line I'm afraid to inform you that the mortality rate for all humans is 100%.
    Context gets lost in this debate. Covid is not the be all and end all.

    Over 600k Brits die every single year normally.

    The overwhelming majority of Care Home residents die within 12 months of entering the Care Home.

    There will be more Care Home residents that have died of natural causes having lost all contact with their families in the final months of their life than there will be who have died from Covid.

    There will be over half a million elderly people who've died of natural causes (and millions more who do not have much longer naturally left) who've essentially lost a very valuable year of life.

    There's tragedies all around us in this mess and the idea that its possible to halt death is preposterous nonsense. The only thing that's possible to do is halt the pandemic - and that's vaccines. Vaccines matter more than everything else combined.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,781
    Just reading through the thread, and need to check that I've got this right.

    1. The UK's current very high death rate compared to most others, in Europe and beyond, tells us nothing. We need to wait for a more reliable excess death measure before we can compare properly, and that is some way off. (And anyway, foreigners aren't as good at collecting data as us.)

    2. The EU's absymal record on vaccine rollout is inevitably going to lead to tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of people dying unnecessarily. We know this to be true (although death rates are currently lower in virtually all EU countries than ours, it's just a matter of time before they overtake us), even though there's no evidence for it yet.

    Trouble is, there's nobody on here defending the EU vaccination approach (despite their being some initial rationale for it), but it still merits constantly repetitive attacks on the EU from several posters. It's a bit boring: the EU messed up. Do we need to keep repeating it?
  • Phil said:

    Hooligans on a day trip don’t bring flex-cuffs, radios & bear spray to the party.
    Depends upon your idea of a party. 😲
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Finally found some data on foreign travel.

    The figure for 2019 was 16% according to this, up from 11% in 2011.

    https://www.statista.com/statistics/480160/share-of-britons-going-on-holiday-abroad/
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited February 2021

    Off Topic

    I registered an old Vauxhall Vectra for use in Galicia in 2007. It wasn't that easy, apart from the paperwork an inspection was required, headlights had to be changed to those from an LHD car and all tyres had to have the same speed rating, so no mixing H and Vs, among a long list of other minor impositions.

    That said, it was easier than registering a Japanese import with the DVLA. An SVA report would have been handy, but at £150 a pop, I did all my own research. Proving the car's exact age was a trial, particularly as the car was a Rover Group product and the liquidators of MG Rover destroyed all the production records. You would have no chance of registering a car with a Motorsport VIN in the UK, even if it had been road registered elsewhere.

    Of course using an alternative VIN would be very illegal.
    Yes, DVLA are pretty hot when it comes to registering imports. LHD isn’t a problem, but headlights need to point the right way, indicators need to be yellow at the back and have repeaters on the side, rear fog light present, speedo needs to read mph etc.

    In recent times, cars have become a lot more standardised though, and digital dashboards make it easier still. Older JDM cars can be a pain to convert even though they’re RHD, but if they’re old enough to be a classic then it’s exempt from almost all the rules. Don’t forget the Japanese FM radio, which works on a weird frequency range, and in modern cars can mean replacing half the dashboard!
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,787
    HYUFD said:

    What they want is for the border to be in Ireland not the Irish Sea, Foster knows she cannot say that publicly now but if Unionist parties combined got a majority at Stormont next year ie DUP + UUP + TUV, that is what they would likely push for.

    Otherwise it would need a closer alignment to EEA rules by the whole UK to remove the Irish Sea border, which would require a PM Starmer in 2024
    That's my impression too. If the DUP were to go on Bullseye, lose, and have Jim Bowen cackle "Here's what you could have won!", whipping the wrapping off "A hard border on the island of Ireland", the smiles would be very forced.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,161
    The 2 biggest screwups of this pandemic by our government are moving people into care homes and allowing unrestricted international travel for most of the last 14 months. Both undoubtedly caused thousands, possibly tens of thousands, of unnecessary deaths.

    On the first I would say this. This decision was made at the time that we were seeking to set up the Nightingale hospitals, where the media were full of pictures of the disaster in northern Italy and the many, many unnecessary deaths suffered there because their health system was overwhelmed. The expectation of the government at the time was that the NHS would be similarly overwhelmed in early course. I think SAGE and other advisors from the NHS were seriously close to panic, and rightly so.

    In that environment some pretty tough decisions were made. A lot of hospital beds were filled with what we have traditionally called bed blockers, people who didn't really need to be in hospital but were because our care system is crap and a suitable plan had not been put together. I suspect instructions were given to move these people out whether they had a full care plan or not so that the beds were available for those for whom they might do more good. So they were punted to care homes with minimal plans and, critically, no checks as to whether they had themselves been infected.

    As it turns out the Nightingale hospitals were barely used, although the NHS was stretched severely it did not fall over and things did not turn out as bad as had entirely reasonably been feared. That makes the decision to move people out to care homes where inadequately trained and provisioned staff failed to prevent the spread of the disease amongst many of our most vulnerable look very wrong. And it was wrong, but only in hindsight.

    I am not saying this is right, I simply say that there is a plausible explanation for what happened and that explanation is consistent with the same thing happening in England, Scotland, Wales and NI, apparently independently. I think it is possible that this decision might be justifiable at the time it was made.

    Our policies on air travel throughout the pandemic, however, I simply find beyond rational explanation.
  • And get the ministers out of Parliament.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,787

    Context gets lost in this debate. Covid is not the be all and end all.

    Over 600k Brits die every single year normally.

    The overwhelming majority of Care Home residents die within 12 months of entering the Care Home.

    There will be more Care Home residents that have died of natural causes having lost all contact with their families in the final months of their life than there will be who have died from Covid.

    There will be over half a million elderly people who've died of natural causes (and millions more who do not have much longer naturally left) who've essentially lost a very valuable year of life.

    There's tragedies all around us in this mess and the idea that its possible to halt death is preposterous nonsense. The only thing that's possible to do is halt the pandemic - and that's vaccines. Vaccines matter more than everything else combined.
    Any chance you might stop saying "and that's vaccines"?
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822
    edited February 2021
    The full preprint of the Scottish vaccine study:

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/162PJKbIKUFEjLevf_xZZjmuGmhB2v5jO/view

    Note that the study specifically covered the single-dose regime only.
  • Phil said:

    Hooligans on a day trip don’t bring flex-cuffs, radios & bear spray to the party.
    Nor did most of the so-called insurrectionists.
  • Yes. How often have you asked that question about the constant, repetitive, and rather boring attacks on the UK from various posters over the last several years? Turnabout is fair play.

    On your second point, it's not just deaths in the EU that concern us. Oxford/AZN is likely to be the primary vaccine for billions in the developing world due to its low cost and ease of transport, so if the EU's campaign against the vaccine increases anti-vax sentiment there even a little, then many thousands of lives could indeed be lost unnecessarily. That's the price of their spite.
    Many thousands of lives could be a severe underestimate. Tens or hundreds of thousands of lives potentially - plus providing the breeding grounds for new variants to arise.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,251
    Sandpit said:

    Yes, DVLA are pretty hot when it comes to registering imports. LHD isn’t a problem, but headlights need to point the right way, indicators need to be yellow at the back and have repeaters on the side, rear fog light present, speedo needs to read mph etc.

    In recent times, cars have become a lot more standardised though, and digital dashboards make it easier still. Older JDM cars can be a pain to convert even though they’re RHD, but if they’re old enough to be a classic then it’s exempt from almost all the rules. Don’t forget the Japanese FM radio, which works on a weird frequency range, and in modern cars can mean replacing half the dashboard!
    Still off topic.

    Thanks, KMh speedo is OK for UK, but no rear fog light is an MOT fail. I hadn't thought of the radio, which is the original, but as it is single DIN it is easily replaced either with a matching used UK radio or a new, bluetooth enabled unit.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,529
    kinabalu said:

    Any chance you might stop saying "and that's vaccines"?
    Why should he? It is absolutely on point.
  • kinabalu said:

    Any chance you might stop saying "and that's vaccines"?
    QTWAIN.

    Not until people like @bigjohnowls stop downplaying vaccines and try to big up other metrics instead.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    Andy_JS said:

    Finally found some data on foreign travel.

    The figure for 2019 was 16% according to this, up from 11% in 2011.

    https://www.statista.com/statistics/480160/share-of-britons-going-on-holiday-abroad/

    That’s the same link I posted way back, and I don’t think you are reading the data correctly.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,781
    MaxPB said:

    Err, except in this thread we've had people previously and currently defend European politicians briefing against the AZ vaccine. On point 1, the last time Spain released their excess deaths figure it was 50% higher than their declared COVID deaths. Since then they've stopped releasing that data. Italy likewise, their excess mortality was running at around 60% higher than declared COVID deaths and then the statistics body put a temporary hold on releasing the data.

    It's not just the likes of Russia and China or Trump trying to cover up excess deaths data. The ONS should be applauded that not only have they continued to release the data, but that they have made a specific series so that it is easily accessible to journalists and ordinary people. In Spain El Pais had to manually collate regional data from PDFs into a single report, the Spanish government is making it purposefully difficult to get the data to discourage people from looking into it. Our government has provided a simple API which requires no special authorisation to access.

    You don't want to see or hear anything good abour the UK, maybe it causes some kind of emotional pain now that we're not in the EU, I don't know. The simple fact is that the UK has got extremely transparent data and statistical reporting, it isn't comparable to very many other countries. Israel is probably the only other nation that does the same level of public data releasing as we do and Italy for COVID has got fairly detailed information but they have hidden their excess deaths away for a long time now.
    I've no idea how you got from my post the ludicrous notion that I don't want to see or hear anything good about the UK. That's almost offensive, but whatever.

    I find that you, and Mr Thompson, are so absolutely certain that you know everything about everything and are completely right on all matters rather frustrating; especially the tendency to regard opinions as 'facts' . Personally, I'm full of self doubt: arrogant enough to think I'm rather bright, but humble enough to acknowledge that stuff is complex and there's lots I don't know or get wrong. When we look back on all this in due course, we may well be able to reach some reliable conclusions on relative performance of different countries. Until then, most of it is just pissing in the wind; it doesn't really lend itself to the level of certainty you and others project.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670

    Dunno how reliable this thread is, although it seems plausible. If it's right, the US had an even narrower escape than we thought:

    https://twitter.com/LiteraryMouse/status/1363755036967374848

    The police said they confiscated lots of guns.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    DavidL said:

    The 2 biggest screwups of this pandemic by our government are moving people into care homes and allowing unrestricted international travel for most of the last 14 months. Both undoubtedly caused thousands, possibly tens of thousands, of unnecessary deaths.

    On the first I would say this. This decision was made at the time that we were seeking to set up the Nightingale hospitals, where the media were full of pictures of the disaster in northern Italy and the many, many unnecessary deaths suffered there because their health system was overwhelmed. The expectation of the government at the time was that the NHS would be similarly overwhelmed in early course. I think SAGE and other advisors from the NHS were seriously close to panic, and rightly so.

    In that environment some pretty tough decisions were made. A lot of hospital beds were filled with what we have traditionally called bed blockers, people who didn't really need to be in hospital but were because our care system is crap and a suitable plan had not been put together. I suspect instructions were given to move these people out whether they had a full care plan or not so that the beds were available for those for whom they might do more good. So they were punted to care homes with minimal plans and, critically, no checks as to whether they had themselves been infected.

    As it turns out the Nightingale hospitals were barely used, although the NHS was stretched severely it did not fall over and things did not turn out as bad as had entirely reasonably been feared. That makes the decision to move people out to care homes where inadequately trained and provisioned staff failed to prevent the spread of the disease amongst many of our most vulnerable look very wrong. And it was wrong, but only in hindsight.

    I am not saying this is right, I simply say that there is a plausible explanation for what happened and that explanation is consistent with the same thing happening in England, Scotland, Wales and NI, apparently independently. I think it is possible that this decision might be justifiable at the time it was made.

    Our policies on air travel throughout the pandemic, however, I simply find beyond rational explanation.

    Good post. Not to say that it would have changed things - perhaps it wouldn't have - but its attempt to "keep the UK open", and thereby continue with international air travel, might have been a (large?) factor in the government going all in and early on the vaccines.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,529
    I flagged that the other day.

    First of a whole raft I expect.
  • BBC - Stubbornly high infection rates are hampering French efforts to ease coronavirus restrictions, with Nice in the south a particular hotspot.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,440

    Another little reported factoid, the EMA took a 2 week holiday over Christmas.... delaying approvals.

    Don't we get the link to Guido/Soaraway Sun!
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,457
    edited February 2021
    Roger said:

    Don't we get the link to Guido/Soaraway Sun!
    I have no idea what you are talking about....source for this Dr John Campbell.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,589

    Presumably each tunnel would be extremely expensive, so even if any of them make sense would you need tunnels to both Liverpool and Heysham?
    If so, maybe add another fron Anglesea?
    What about a zip wire across the Irish Sea from the top of Snowdon?
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,616
    edited February 2021

    Just reading through the thread, and need to check that I've got this right.

    1. The UK's current very high death rate compared to most others, in Europe and beyond, tells us nothing. We need to wait for a more reliable excess death measure before we can compare properly, and that is some way off. (And anyway, foreigners aren't as good at collecting data as us.)

    2. The EU's absymal record on vaccine rollout is inevitably going to lead to tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of people dying unnecessarily. We know this to be true (although death rates are currently lower in virtually all EU countries than ours, it's just a matter of time before they overtake us), even though there's no evidence for it yet.

    Trouble is, there's nobody on here defending the EU vaccination approach (despite their being some initial rationale for it), but it still merits constantly repetitive attacks on the EU from several posters. It's a bit boring: the EU messed up. Do we need to keep repeating it?

    1 - The UK's current death rate has now come back down to exactly the EU average.



    2 - That's what I argued last week, whilst suggesting it might not be inevitable if thet get their policies right.

    We will know by some time in March.

    Without researching 27 datasets, I would suggest that the "virtually all" is more likely to be "approximately half".
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,188
    Just been invited to an Online Gaudy for my old college. Can't imagine anything less gaudy-like than another bloody Zoom...
  • What about a zip wire across the Irish Sea from the top of Snowdon?
    Sounds fun!
This discussion has been closed.