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First post statement YouGov polling relatively good for ministers – politicalbetting.com

13

Comments

  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,234

    I read a sobering article that there have been serious pandemics roughly every three or four years over the last two decades (SARS, MERS, Swine Flu, Zika, Ebola - we have of course been living with AIDS for 40 years now) so the warning signs were there even before this kicked off. It would be niave to think this is the last one. Save maybe for swine flu this was the first beginning in the 21st century that could be described as being truly global and it would be niave to thing it is going to be the last.
    Which is why the extent of obsession about it and the OTT measures taken this year is worrying given why would invest in any business that is going to be shut down by government order every few years? The key is to build the NHS capacity and forget lockdowns because nobody is going to invest in business or indeed (more tragically even) in themselves

    SARS death toll 812
    MERS 866
    Zika - Mosquito vector not present in the UK
    HIV (AIDS) - spread through sexual contact, IV drug use, not getting too close to someone in the pub.
    Swine flu - 0.3% IFR, R0 of 1.5, 284,000 death/1 billion infections.
    Covid has a base r0 of at least 3, looks to have an IFR of 1 - 2%, until recently had no vaccine and a 2.5 million death toll minimum and rising. It's far more transmissible and more deadly than swine flu.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    ydoethur said:

    Not a surprise, but not good news either:

    UK unemployment rate rises to 5.1%
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-56165929

    What might it be when furlough ends ?
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,677
    edited February 2021
    Smithers said:

    The bitterness and bile from a few presumably Labour supporters on here is remarkable.

    I think we all acknowledge that there have been some big mistakes in the way the UK handled this pandemic early on. But that we’re now one of the most successful countries on the planet with our vaccine rollout.

    Will lefties never be happy with British success?

    Welcome to the site, Smithers. I'm delighred things are improving and think it's great that the vaccination strategy has worked out well. I was critical of Johnson for his tone last year, with its flow of false optimism and in particular the fatally ingratiating half-promise to "save Christmas", but I thnk he's doing a good job right now. If only the Government would pay adequate support for inhected people to stay home for two weeks, I'd be broadly satisfied at the moment. And you won't find a more dedicated Labour supporter here than me - I've been a member for exactly 50 years.

    None of this, good or bad, will IMO affect long-term voting intentions. Ultimately it's a non-partisan crisis, and we all recognise that both success and failures will happen as we try to work through the issue.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,264

    I'd be curious to see a citation for that. Because a fifth of all deaths are from care homes and the median for care homes is to die within a year of entry.

    I've seen that stat repeatedly bandied about taking age into account, not comorbidities.
    I suspect the distribution is very skewed though. A lot of quite ill very dependent people with limited life expectancy pull the median down, but there will be a long tail of people who make a decision to move into a nice care home (possibly barely a care home, with not very intensive care) and live there for a long time. It would be interesting to see the mean (the mean will be a better measure for total life-years lost).

    Example: my great aunt lived 11 years in a 'care home', but the home in fact has a higher dependency section and a part that had services ranging from little more than sheltered accommodation up to a bit more help. I would have thought that she'd have been counted as a care home resident nonetheless (single building and overall it was a care home)

  • Pulpstar said:

    Which is why the extent of obsession about it and the OTT measures taken this year is worrying given why would invest in any business that is going to be shut down by government order every few years? The key is to build the NHS capacity and forget lockdowns because nobody is going to invest in business or indeed (more tragically even) in themselves
    SARS death toll 812
    MERS 866
    Zika - Mosquito vector not present in the UK
    HIV (AIDS) - spread through sexual contact, IV drug use, not getting too close to someone in the pub.
    Swine flu - 0.3% IFR, R0 of 1.5, 284,000 death/1 billion infections.
    Covid has a base r0 of at least 3, looks to have an IFR of 1 - 2%, until recently had no vaccine and a 2.5 million death toll minimum and rising. It's far more transmissible and more deadly than swine flu.


    Is swine flu transmissible before symptoms show? That I think is the really nasty thing about C-19 (although not unique).

    Anyway, must go and teach: have a good day everyone.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    edited February 2021
    Pulpstar said:

    Which is why the extent of obsession about it and the OTT measures taken this year is worrying given why would invest in any business that is going to be shut down by government order every few years? The key is to build the NHS capacity and forget lockdowns because nobody is going to invest in business or indeed (more tragically even) in themselves

    SARS death toll 812
    MERS 866
    Zika - Mosquito vector not present in the UK
    HIV (AIDS) - spread through sexual contact, IV drug use, not getting too close to someone in the pub.
    Swine flu - 0.3% IFR, R0 of 1.5, 284,000 death/1 billion infections.
    Covid has a base r0 of at least 3, looks to have an IFR of 1 - 2%, until recently had no vaccine and a 2.5 million death toll minimum and rising. It's far more transmissible and more deadly than swine flu.

    Not NHS capacity - rather public health capacity (which had been run down for at least two decades prior to the pandemic).
    With adequate preparation, we could have been similar to Taiwan or S Korea. There's no reason we couldn't perform better should it ever happen again.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,218

    They would have been skewered without today announcement.
    It would have been shish if they were cancelled again...
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,677
    That said, I see SAGE advise: "Relaxation of a significant number of restrictions over three months starting from the beginning of April could lead to hospital occupancy higher than the January peak whereas relaxation over nine months would result in a much smaller peak." That does sound as though the 3-month opening may be too fast.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650
    Mortimer said:

    This is bang on.

    I live in Dorset. There simply isn't the level of rural employment that there used to be; or rather, not in the farming industry.
    A move of people from cities to work at home may affect that, surely?

    Also, if it is depopulated, a smaller number of people may have an impact.

    I remember a series on R4 back in the early 1990s called The Village (later went to TV). About Bentley in Hampshire. One of the episodes that I enjoyed showed something called iirc 'The Bentley Oil Company' which turned out to be a chap doing oil trading from his outbuilding.

    As may (perhaps) hobby farmers / market gardeners, depending how many take it up.

    A whole Green narrative is about less efficient, more labour intensive farming. I'd view that as being as head-in-the-clouds as most of the Green stuff, but there may be elements of truth there.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650

    It would have been shish if they were cancelled again...
    Caught on a cleft stick...
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    TOPPING said:

    1) I don't read the glossies; and
    2) I would be amazed if they ever printed that; because
    3) you are right she can't.
    Removing Harry from the line of succession requires an Act of Parliament. Neither parliament or government is going anywhere near it.

  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    It certainly has more in it for families than me. My running club isn't going to be able to meet until 29 March, I'll be able to meet someone outside socially from the 8th but I can meet someone for a walk or a run anyway. Six people in a garden from Easter but I don't normally socialise with people at home. So I suspect I'm being locked up for a few extra weeks so their kids can go back to school. (And that may well be the right decision). If we can meet up under the Rule of 6 at Easter I don't see why we can't do that in a pub garden.
    Because it’s multiple groups of 6 in a confined space with alcohol
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746

    I can.

    "Charring meat" is safe, not a single one of those pandemics came from domestic meat consumption.
    Maybe but we are encroaching on their space and forcing ourselves into theirs. I don't think that it has caused any pandemics but I spent some time after I left school teaching in the city of Jodphur in India. When I was there, 28 years ago, the school was on the very outskirts of the city on the edge of the desert. Now it is virtually in the city centre.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,218
    MattW said:

    Caught on a cleft stick...
    I Pita the fool who tries to cancel them next year...
  • I can.

    "Charring meat" is safe, not a single one of those pandemics came from domestic meat consumption.
    It's also by definition true that all pandemics come from zoonotic infection. They have to be infections our immune systems are naive to, and have to have been harboured somewhere. Measles happened when rinderpest jumped the species barrier.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Foxy said:

    I don't think we know yet, but effectively Private Hospitals have been bailed out by generous NHS contracts in the last year. I see that as a likely pattern.

    If giving out contracts, I cannot see ending competitive tendering as progress. It does bring scrutiny, and questions over value.
    That’s a very unfair way of putting it. The government decided that the NHS needed capacity so block booked the private hospitals. There was a purpose to it not a bail out.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    TOPPING said:

    1) I don't read the glossies; and
    2) I would be amazed if they ever printed that; because
    3) you are right she can't.
    Mostly the American glossies TBF.
  • ydoethur said:

    Indeed. Until we learn to cook them thoroughly, there will always be risks.

    Have a good morning.
    You can have my rare steak when you can prise it from my cold, dead hands.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012

    "Farmer Starmer".

    *titter*

    Don't want to go taking the knee in that field. Not unless you want it covered in bullshit....

    SKS could get the farmers' vote by promising to join the EU when we are not in it, and leaving it when we are. It's like negotiating with the DUP.

  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    TOPPING said:

    1) I don't read the glossies; and
    2) I would be amazed if they ever printed that; because
    3) you are right she can't.
    By “glossies” he means national enquirer
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,176
    Charles said:

    Because it’s multiple groups of 6 in a confined space with alcohol
    Sounds like the dream
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    Charles said:

    That’s a very unfair way of putting it. The government decided that the NHS needed capacity so block booked the private hospitals. There was a purpose to it not a bail out.
    Indeed and it would have been absurd not to utilise fully equipped capacity at a time when we were also investing in Nightingales. No need to renew though and I suspect private medicine will not be that bothered as the massively increased waiting times on the NHS will generate all the business they want and then some over the next 2-5 years.
  • Mortimer said:

    Similar for me.

    But the 'large events' in May should get our book fairs back running. Which is excellent. They're linked to around 1/5 of my business, and about 4/5 of my joy in working life; cannot wait to get back to those!
    I'm hoping for parkruns and running races (annoyingly the roadmap doesn't say what will happen to mass-participation events as opposed to those with spectators) and maybe after 17 May I will be able to start planning some sort of foreign travel.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    Nigelb said:

    Not NHS capacity - rather public health capacity (which had been run down for at least two decades prior to the pandemic).
    With adequate preparation, we could have been similar to Taiwan or S Korea. There's no reason we couldn't perform better should it ever happen again.
    Excellent point.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    Charles said:

    By “glossies” he means national enquirer
    But that's where you get the real news, have you not seen MIB?
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650
    edited February 2021
    algarkirk said:

    SKS could get the farmers' vote by promising to join the EU when we are not in it, and leaving it when we are. It's like negotiating with the DUP.

    I think that perhaps has a half life, depending on how post-Brexit beds in when it has done.

    I'd say it's a little like the Red Wall - Tories will keep or lose it depending on how far their concerns have been answered, and changes are seen to be in place, in say 30 months' years time.

    Perhaps it will also depend on how far we have diverged.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    algarkirk said:

    Removing Harry from the line of succession requires an Act of Parliament. Neither parliament or government is going anywhere near it.

    Does it? I though Peter Philips just disclaimed it when he married Autumn?
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    It's also by definition true that all pandemics come from zoonotic infection. They have to be infections our immune systems are naive to, and have to have been harboured somewhere. Measles happened when rinderpest jumped the species barrier.
    100%

    I spend a lot of time thinking through OneHealth - sat on a long panel discussion about it yesterday
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Sounds like the dream
    You have to go to Belgium for that kind of dream!
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    I`m confused by Hancock`s answer this morning to a question posed by Nick Robinson.

    Robinson asked when people could travel within the UK to see parents and grandparents again. Hancock said from 17 May. This is wrong I`m sure.

    The current bubble arrangements allow for such visits already - and outside of bubbles the "Stay at home" message is dropped on 29 March and replaced with "minimise travel" .

    So I don`t understand Hancock`s response. What`s the relevance of 17 May in this respect?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,218
    Mortimer said:

    This is bang on.

    I live in Dorset. There simply isn't the level of rural employment that there used to be; or rather, not in the farming industry.
    Given the religious belief that all "development" is bad, the countryside will become even more of a jobs desert over time than it is at present.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    That said, I see SAGE advise: "Relaxation of a significant number of restrictions over three months starting from the beginning of April could lead to hospital occupancy higher than the January peak whereas relaxation over nine months would result in a much smaller peak." That does sound as though the 3-month opening may be too fast.

    Another comfortably off older bloke (living in the leafy suburbs, no less), and a self-confessed lockdown-lover (wonder why?) advising a long, long lockdown.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    edited February 2021
    Pulpstar said:

    Which is why the extent of obsession about it and the OTT measures taken this year is worrying given why would invest in any business that is going to be shut down by government order every few years? The key is to build the NHS capacity and forget lockdowns because nobody is going to invest in business or indeed (more tragically even) in themselves
    SARS death toll 812
    MERS 866
    Zika - Mosquito vector not present in the UK
    HIV (AIDS) - spread through sexual contact, IV drug use, not getting too close to someone in the pub.
    Swine flu - 0.3% IFR, R0 of 1.5, 284,000 death/1 billion infections.
    Covid has a base r0 of at least 3, looks to have an IFR of 1 - 2%, until recently had no vaccine and a 2.5 million death toll minimum and rising. It's far more transmissible and more deadly than swine flu.



    It didn't take an enormous leap of imagination that a SARS type virus with far greater transmissabiliy, albeit maybe with a marginally lower IFR, was going to emerge. Indeed, famously, Matt Hancock watched a movie about it. And its not as if worse hasn't happened within (just about) living memory in 1918-20.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Stocky said:

    I`m confused by Hancock`s answer this morning to a question posed by Nick Robinson.

    Robinson asked when people could travel within the UK to see parents and grandparents again. Hancock said from 17 May. This is wrong I`m sure.

    The current bubble arrangements allow for such visits already - and outside of bubbles the "Stay at home" message is dropped on 29 March and replaced with "minimise travel" .

    So I don`t understand Hancock`s response. What`s the relevance of 17 May in this respect?

    Maybe he interpreted “parents and grandparents” as being at the same time - ie multiple households?

    I thought Mar 29 was 2 households?

  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,234
    edited February 2021
    Stocky said:

    I`m confused by Hancock`s answer this morning to a question posed by Nick Robinson.

    Robinson asked when people could travel within the UK to see parents and grandparents again. Hancock said from 17 May. This is wrong I`m sure.

    The current bubble arrangements allow for such visits already - and outside of bubbles the "Stay at home" message is dropped on 29 March and replaced with "minimise travel" .

    So I don`t understand Hancock`s response. What`s the relevance of 17 May in this respect?

    Most families won't qualify under the below "bubble" arrangements currently:

    Who can make a support bubble
    Not everybody can form a support bubble. However, on 2 December the rules changed to widen eligibility for forming one.

    You can form a support bubble with another household of any size if:

    you live by yourself – even if carers visit you to provide support
    you are the only adult in your household who does not need continuous care as a result of a disability
    your household includes a child who is under the age of one or was under that age on 2 December 2020
    your household includes a child with a disability who requires continuous care and is under the age of 5, or was under that age on 2 December 2020
    you are aged 16 or 17 living with others of the same age and without any adults
    you are a single adult living with one or more children who are under the age of 18 or were under that age on 12 June 2020
    You should not form a support bubble with a household that is part of another support bubble.

    I think the bubble arrangements are likely either deliberately or accidentally misunderstood fairly widely though.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    Charles said:

    Does it? I though Peter Philips just disclaimed it when he married Autumn?
    Harry could cut himself out by converting to Catholicism but I would not count on it.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    DougSeal said:

    Excellent point.
    Is it though? In normal times we are heading towards spending 8% of GDP on health. Do we really want to spend 10% for the next decade on the off chance that Covid 2 comes along? Is that the best way for us to recover from the economic hit of this one? I am not so sure.

    Personally, I would look to see what we can do within existing structures. We need to continue and enhance our vaccine making capacity in the UK. That should be easy as we make a generous contribution to vaccinating the world. We look at where the other bottle necks arose such as vials. We think about keeping more of the PPE manufacturing capacity we have created. These are relatively cheap hits (although there will no doubt be endless whinging about contracts for the latter going to cronies rather than cheaper producers abroad). We look at what worked and what didn't.

    And other than that we try to get back to normal as soon as possible. The last thing the economy needs right now is an additional health spend burden to finance.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,218
    DavidL said:

    Indeed and it would have been absurd not to utilise fully equipped capacity at a time when we were also investing in Nightingales. No need to renew though and I suspect private medicine will not be that bothered as the massively increased waiting times on the NHS will generate all the business they want and then some over the next 2-5 years.
    IIRC the government block booked the private hospitals without really giving them an option - the only nego was on price. Which was lower than the per-bed cost in the NHS...
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746

    That said, I see SAGE advise: "Relaxation of a significant number of restrictions over three months starting from the beginning of April could lead to hospital occupancy higher than the January peak whereas relaxation over nine months would result in a much smaller peak." That does sound as though the 3-month opening may be too fast.

    Peak in infections or hospitalisations?
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    Charles said:

    Maybe he interpreted “parents and grandparents” as being at the same time - ie multiple households?

    I thought Mar 29 was 2 households?

    29 March rules say "No household mixing indoors", so you can go and see outdoors. And, in any case, bubbles have always allowed for this (you can stay overnight under the bubble rules).
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    DougSeal said:

    Harry could cut himself out by converting to Catholicism but I would not count on it.
    Depends how much he wants to flick off his grandmother I suppose...

    (As my daughter puts it: “you’re not the boss of me”)
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180

    IIRC the government block booked the private hospitals without really giving them an option - the only nego was on price. Which was lower than the per-bed cost in the NHS...
    Yep, they made them an offer they couldn't refuse.
  • DougSeal said:

    Maybe but we are encroaching on their space and forcing ourselves into theirs. I don't think that it has caused any pandemics but I spent some time after I left school teaching in the city of Jodphur in India. When I was there, 28 years ago, the school was on the very outskirts of the city on the edge of the desert. Now it is virtually in the city centre.
    That's population growth in the developing world it's nothing to do with meat. Same thing would happen even if the world was vegan.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    Pulpstar said:

    Most families won't qualify under the below "bubble" arrangements currently:

    Who can make a support bubble
    Not everybody can form a support bubble. However, on 2 December the rules changed to widen eligibility for forming one.

    You can form a support bubble with another household of any size if:

    you live by yourself – even if carers visit you to provide support
    you are the only adult in your household who does not need continuous care as a result of a disability
    your household includes a child who is under the age of one or was under that age on 2 December 2020
    your household includes a child with a disability who requires continuous care and is under the age of 5, or was under that age on 2 December 2020
    you are aged 16 or 17 living with others of the same age and without any adults
    you are a single adult living with one or more children who are under the age of 18 or were under that age on 12 June 2020
    You should not form a support bubble with a household that is part of another support bubble.

    I think the bubble arrangements are likely either deliberately or accidentally misunderstood fairly widely though.
    Ok, so you can bubble with a single grandparent living alone but not if both grandparents are living together.

    But even outside of bubbles you can travel from 29 March UK wide.

    I think Hancock must have been referring to non-bubble overnight stays - in which case 17 May would be correct. I think.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    I'd like to say I was amazed that this was not the focal point of press questions at Boris's press conference yesterday (since everything depends on that) but, sadly, I'm not.

  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Stocky said:

    29 March rules say "No household mixing indoors", so you can go and see outdoors. And, in any case, bubbles have always allowed for this (you can stay overnight under the bubble rules).
    Yes. But you can see only one other household in a private garden or outside.

    I am planning to celebrate my birthday (mar 30) with my mother who is in a bubble with my sister’s family (living alone/child under 5)

    If properly followed the rules on bubbles are not open to everyone.

    “Maximum of up to 6 people or 2 households permitted to meet outdoors from Mar 29”

    https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/health/coronavirus/household-mixing-rules-how-many-people-can-meet-outside-in-england-as-government-reveals-lockdown-roadmap-3142692?amp
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    For men however, the pub is the focal point of social interaction and until pubs open, many of us remain remote and cut off from our friends. You see, we tend not to meet for coffee, or go clothes shopping together. We do not do Pilates in the park or hook up when we take the kids to the duck pond. We don’t Zoom for chats.

    Instead, you can find us bonding in the nooks and crannies of Britain’s pubs, or standing at bars, clutching pints, talking rubbish. These are our rituals, enshrined in us by our fathers and their fathers before them.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/food-and-drink/pubs-and-bars/men-like-need-pubs-reopen-sooner-good-reason/

    What percentage of men only socialise in pubs and bars?
  • I'd appreciate if the British kebab awards could wait until I've gone on the lash in June so I can submit my judgement.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited February 2021
    Animal_pb said:

    You can have my rare steak when you can prise it from my cold, dead hands.
    Rare steak is cooked properly.

    Rare chicken not so much.
  • DavidL said:

    I'd like to say I was amazed that this was not the focal point of press questions at Boris's press conference yesterday (since everything depends on that) but, sadly, I'm not.

    this was one of the many similar replies to the tweet:

    https://twitter.com/JolyonWhats/status/1364129816333725697
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Stocky said:

    Ok, so you can bubble with a single grandparent living alone but not if both grandparents are living together.

    But even outside of bubbles you can travel from 29 March UK wide.

    I think Hancock must have been referring to non-bubble overnight stays - in which case 17 May would be correct. I think.
    Or if he was thinking of three households.

    You + parents + grandparents *at the same time* is not allowed out with a bubble before May
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,507

    Rare steak is cooked properly.

    Rare chicken not so much.
    In Germany, they actually serve up pork tartare, which is gross.
  • Stocky said:

    Ok, so you can bubble with a single grandparent living alone but not if both grandparents are living together.

    But even outside of bubbles you can travel from 29 March UK wide.

    I think Hancock must have been referring to non-bubble overnight stays - in which case 17 May would be correct. I think.
    The reality is, if you meet up outside in a garden, that some of your group are going to go inside once or twice to visit the look for a wee. And, if it's really cold, they might slip inside the conservatory with a cardigan on for a spot of laptray lunch, with the windows open.

    The Government I'm sure know this, and they just don't want prolonged or overnight stays, huddling under rugs on the sofa all evening, and people generally taking the piss.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,507
    algarkirk said:

    Removing Harry from the line of succession requires an Act of Parliament. Neither parliament or government is going anywhere near it.

    Maybe Parliament will pass an Act of Attainder.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    DavidL said:

    Is it though? In normal times we are heading towards spending 8% of GDP on health. Do we really want to spend 10% for the next decade on the off chance that Covid 2 comes along? Is that the best way for us to recover from the economic hit of this one? I am not so sure.

    Personally, I would look to see what we can do within existing structures. We need to continue and enhance our vaccine making capacity in the UK. That should be easy as we make a generous contribution to vaccinating the world. We look at where the other bottle necks arose such as vials. We think about keeping more of the PPE manufacturing capacity we have created. These are relatively cheap hits (although there will no doubt be endless whinging about contracts for the latter going to cronies rather than cheaper producers abroad). We look at what worked and what didn't.

    And other than that we try to get back to normal as soon as possible. The last thing the economy needs right now is an additional health spend burden to finance.
    Yes - I do. It is a matter of national security. The point NigelB was making was to do with effective public health monitoring and supression of infectious agents rather than building new hospitals. I think that that could be a relatively cheap and not the financial burden you indicate.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    DougSeal said:

    Harry could cut himself out by converting to Catholicism but I would not count on it.
    It is an interesting thought though, what would Harry have to say on Oprah for there to be a Parliamentary motion to remove him from the line of succession. Accuse his uncle of being a wrongun? Outing himself as a Republican? Outing himself as illegitimate?

    Being a soppy woke millennial isn’t enough cause one suspects.
  • Pulpstar said:

    Most families won't qualify under the below "bubble" arrangements currently:

    Who can make a support bubble
    Not everybody can form a support bubble. However, on 2 December the rules changed to widen eligibility for forming one.

    You can form a support bubble with another household of any size if:

    you live by yourself – even if carers visit you to provide support
    you are the only adult in your household who does not need continuous care as a result of a disability
    your household includes a child who is under the age of one or was under that age on 2 December 2020
    your household includes a child with a disability who requires continuous care and is under the age of 5, or was under that age on 2 December 2020
    you are aged 16 or 17 living with others of the same age and without any adults
    you are a single adult living with one or more children who are under the age of 18 or were under that age on 12 June 2020
    You should not form a support bubble with a household that is part of another support bubble.

    I think the bubble arrangements are likely either deliberately or accidentally misunderstood fairly widely though.
    "you are the only adult in your household who does not need continuous care as a result of a disability"

    Blimey. All these months and that is the first time I have seen that. Has it been added recently?
  • Charles said:

    What percentage of men only socialise in pubs and bars?
    I would add sport events to pubs and bars and also work . However the theory is sound
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    Charles said:

    Or if he was thinking of three households.

    You + parents + grandparents *at the same time* is not allowed out with a bubble before May
    So, to give an example: if I, my wife and our two children (under 18) (all same household) want to travel 200 miles to see a single oldie that we have bubbled with this is OK now. And we could stay over if we wanted.

    If we four want to do same thing and visit a single oldie NOT within our bubble then 17 May if indoors, 29 March if outdoors assuming no-one else present (and we would not be allowed to stay over)??

    Good grief - no wonder people get confused.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,234

    The reality is, if you meet up outside in a garden, that some of your group are going to go inside once or twice to visit the look for a wee. And, if it's really cold, they might slip inside the conservatory with a cardigan on for a spot of laptray lunch, with the windows open.

    The Government I'm sure know this, and they just don't want prolonged or overnight stays, huddling under rugs on the sofa all evening, and people generally taking the piss.
    Yep, Gov't knows that gardens means indoors. This is why earlier and in Scotland a distinction was made between private gardens and public spaces.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    Rare steak is cooked properly.

    Rare chicken not so much.
    The instruction in Canada it I believe: "cut off it's horns and wipe its arse".
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279

    The reality is, if you meet up outside in a garden, that some of your group are going to go inside once or twice to visit the look for a wee. And, if it's really cold, they might slip inside the conservatory with a cardigan on for a spot of laptray lunch, with the windows open.

    The Government I'm sure know this, and they just don't want prolonged or overnight stays, huddling under rugs on the sofa all evening, and people generally taking the piss.
    Yes I agree, but the worry is if you get stopped by the police during your journey one needs to have a good answer in one`s defence and the police have shown that they themselves are a bit fuzzy about understanding the rules.
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,012
    There are an awful lot of people who are going to be very unhappy when travelling to visit their mother in law is allowed....
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    Charles said:

    Does it? I though Peter Philips just disclaimed it when he married Autumn?
    The Royal website thinks he is 15th in line.


    https://www.royal.uk/succession?page=3


  • Stocky said:

    Yes I agree, but the worry is if you get stopped by the police during your journey one needs to have a good answer in one`s defence and the police have shown that they themselves are a bit fuzzy about understanding the rules.
    You just say you're travelling locally to meet your family outside in a group of six.

    They can't do anything.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,234

    "you are the only adult in your household who does not need continuous care as a result of a disability"

    Blimey. All these months and that is the first time I have seen that. Has it been added recently?
    2nd December. The list is obviously made for single people/lone parents/carers to retain some degree of contact and socialisation with other adults.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814

    The reality is, if you meet up outside in a garden, that some of your group are going to go inside once or twice to visit the look for a wee. And, if it's really cold, they might slip inside the conservatory with a cardigan on for a spot of laptray lunch, with the windows open.

    The Government I'm sure know this, and they just don't want prolonged or overnight stays, huddling under rugs on the sofa all evening, and people generally taking the piss.
    I was intrigued that “saunas” will be allowed to open from mid May. A good chunk of policy makers are presumably pretty familiar with what really happens in there and still feel it’s less risky to open them than allow pubs to have unrestricted opening.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    Stocky said:

    So, to give an example: if I, my wife and our two children (under 18) (all same household) want to travel 200 miles to see a single oldie that we have bubbled with this is OK now. And we could stay over if we wanted.

    If we four want to do same thing and visit a single oldie NOT within our bubble then 17 May if indoors, 29 March if outdoors assuming no-one else present (and we would not be allowed to stay over)??

    Good grief - no wonder people get confused.
    As @Casino has said, it's the broad thrust that is important. You are thinking about it - you might or might not end up actually doing it - and the aim is to nudge people to continue not to run free.

    Of course some will do stuff against the rules (whatever the hell they are) but the broad mass won't.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,234
    edited February 2021
    moonshine said:

    I was intrigued that “saunas” will be allowed to open from mid May. A good chunk of policy makers are presumably pretty familiar with what really happens in there and still feel it’s less risky to open them than allow pubs to have unrestricted opening.
    It's that hot room you go into before heading into the swimming pool at the gym isn't it ?
  • theProletheProle Posts: 1,303

    That said, I see SAGE advise: "Relaxation of a significant number of restrictions over three months starting from the beginning of April could lead to hospital occupancy higher than the January peak whereas relaxation over nine months would result in a much smaller peak." That does sound as though the 3-month opening may be too fast.

    I think that is just SAGE demonstrating their absurd approach to life rooted in extreme safetism.

    The reality is that the *speed* of opening up makes no difference to the number of cases in the medium term. What matters is the total *extent* of opening up, and the size of the vaccinated population.

    Obviously whilst the vaccine program is still rolling out, there may be some need for restrictions, but I don't know which alternative universe SAGE are in if they think the rollout will take 9 months more.

    We will eventually end up in a "steady state" with most adults vaccinated, and no restrictions. This will lead to a certain level of cases, with which we will have to live.

    Once we've vaccinated everyone, what on earth are SAGE planning on waiting for?
  • Charles said:

    What percentage of men only socialise in pubs and bars?
    It's certainly my main regular social contact in normal times. The others are parkrun and running club meetings. And work of course but I don't count that as social.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Stocky said:

    So, to give an example: if I, my wife and our two children (under 18) (all same household) want to travel 200 miles to see a single oldie that we have bubbled with this is OK now. And we could stay over if we wanted.

    If we four want to do same thing and visit a single oldie NOT within our bubble then 17 May if indoors, 29 March if outdoors assuming no-one else present (and we would not be allowed to stay over)??

    Good grief - no wonder people get confused.
    Most people don’t.

    You are in a bubble or you are not. So you know the rules for a bubble.

    And yes the second paragraph is right - all you need to remember is Mar 29 outdoors and May 17 indoors
  • That's population growth in the developing world it's nothing to do with meat. Same thing would happen even if the world was vegan.
    MERS (middle east respiratory syndrome–related coronavirus) found that a Saudi man who kept camels applied a herbal medicine to the noses of several of his ill ones, touching their nasal discharge as a consequence, and then subsequently fell stricken with MERS and died. Others are mosquito born. And several seem to originate in bats, which love incubating strange viruses.

    You'd need to totally isolate all types of human contact with any form animal, creature or insect to be sure of containing all forms of trans-species coronavirus in future, which isn't feasible.

    There is certainly something to be said for basic hygiene and sanitary standards though, and quite frankly I wouldn't object to the WTO/G20 setting global standards for this - but I wouldn't trust China to follow them, so it might be easier to simply throw a cordon sanitaire around them from an SPS perspective in future.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    edited February 2021
    theProle said:

    I think that is just SAGE demonstrating their absurd approach to life rooted in extreme safetism.

    The reality is that the *speed* of opening up makes no difference to the number of cases in the medium term. What matters is the total *extent* of opening up, and the size of the vaccinated population.

    Obviously whilst the vaccine program is still rolling out, there may be some need for restrictions, but I don't know which alternative universe SAGE are in if they think the rollout will take 9 months more.

    We will eventually end up in a "steady state" with most adults vaccinated, and no restrictions. This will lead to a certain level of cases, with which we will have to live.

    Once we've vaccinated everyone, what on earth are SAGE planning on waiting for?
    Covid is not like the flu.

    But it might be that we will have to live with as many people dying of Covid as die of the flu each year. 28% of flu deaths are of those below 65yrs old.

    No one wants any of these diseases and if you or your family get one, or, god forbid, die of one it is a tragedy. But we have to live around them.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,234

    It's certainly my main regular social contact in normal times. The others are parkrun and running club meetings. And work of course but I don't count that as social.
    My running club tends to head into the pub after a run.
  • moonshine said:

    I was intrigued that “saunas” will be allowed to open from mid May. A good chunk of policy makers are presumably pretty familiar with what really happens in there and still feel it’s less risky to open them than allow pubs to have unrestricted opening.
    You heard of a Russian sauna?

    It's a thing. Bulgaria offer them at spas due to a big Russian tourist market.

    It's really weird. You pay (a lot) to be locked in all day with your group with several bottles of vodka and a large fish.

    They love it. I have no idea why. Nor how they get the fish smell out afterwards.
  • They may not be set in stone; but those dates are predicated on worst-case scenarios going forward, not best. In short, we are going to have to see something utterly unexpected not to meet them.

    But leave even the slightest opening for those same belligerent journos to go on about earlier openings - and it is all they will ever talk about.

    Maybe we will see some of the 5 week breaks between changes become 4. But even that would lead to questions like "Were the scientists wrong to say they needed five weeks of data to assess the impact? Or are they still right and you are the one taking risks with our lives? Which is it, Prime Minister?" So unless the results are massively ahead of their base case on the good news stakes, I don't expect changes to the timetable. I certainly don't see them making any changes until we are other side of Easter at least.

    The polling is solidly enough behind him that the PM doesn't need to take risks with ANY level of tinkering. The only thing that blows us off course is if a new variant rips through schools and starts badly affecting the young. Pray that doesn't happen.

    Aiui the five weeks between each step is made up of four weeks to detect any adverse changes, and then one week to provide notice of any alterations needed.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    It seems to me that Australia may have just saved print journalism and could even lead to a relaxation of paywalls in the UK once we adopt similar rules.
  • Charles said:

    Because it’s multiple groups of 6 in a confined space with alcohol
    Well it will be multiple groups of 6 sitting separately round picnic benches outdoors. Back gardens will be less controlled. But I suppose the pub garden does have more opportunity for milling around and groups interacting.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,234
    edited February 2021
    DougSeal said:
    I don't think No 10 should speed up. Or slow down. This one has been brewed up like Baby Bear's porridge.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    TOPPING said:

    Covid is not like the flu.

    But it might be that we will have to live with as many people dying of Covid as die of the flu each year. 28% of flu deaths are of those below 65yrs old.

    No one wants any of these diseases and if you or your family get one, or, god forbid, die of one it is a tragedy. But we have to live around them.
    In many ways novel influenzas are actually worse cf 1918-20.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,317
    Smithers said:

    The bitterness and bile from a few presumably Labour supporters on here is remarkable.

    I think we all acknowledge that there have been some big mistakes in the way the UK handled this pandemic early on. But that we’re now one of the most successful countries on the planet with our vaccine rollout.

    Will lefties never be happy with British success?

    Two of the most vociferous naysayers are former Tories. Scott and Alastair Meeks. My bitterness and bile is as a former Labourite. I think it's fair to say my bitterness and bile has been addressed to Corbyn, Drakeford and Johnson's Government in equal measure. Corbyn and Drakeford criticisms seem fine on here, but don't mess with Boris.

    Vaccine rollout on the Government's watch has been excellent, they are entitled, as the incumbent, to take credit for what goes well on their watch. Johnson's message yesterday was statesmanlike, even if the delivery was less so. There are many issues during the pandemic that haven't gone well. Government supporters appear ill prepared to accept any Governmental responsibility for this.

    Anyway, I promised RobD I was gone, so with that I'm dust.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,552
    DougSeal said:
    Thanks a bunch. That has given the press their questions until June.

    "But...but...but... Professor Ferguson...."
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    Nigelb said:

    Not NHS capacity - rather public health capacity (which had been run down for at least two decades prior to the pandemic).
    With adequate preparation, we could have been similar to Taiwan or S Korea. There's no reason we couldn't perform better should it ever happen again.
    Except for the resistance for having any form of commission that could actually result in understanding what we did wrong this time round.

    Serious, sober people came up with a pandemic plan that consisted of killing care home residents and keeping international flights flying. How? Why? Without answering those questions in a no-blame setting we will repeatedly make serious, 10,000s life lost, mistakes again and again.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746

    MERS (middle east respiratory syndrome–related coronavirus) found that a Saudi man who kept camels applied a herbal medicine to the noses of several of his ill ones, touching their nasal discharge as a consequence, and then subsequently fell stricken with MERS and died. Others are mosquito born. And several seem to originate in bats, which love incubating strange viruses.

    You'd need to totally isolate all types of human contact with any form animal, creature or insect to be sure of containing all forms of trans-species coronavirus in future, which isn't feasible.

    There is certainly something to be said for basic hygiene and sanitary standards though, and quite frankly I wouldn't object to the WTO/G20 setting global standards for this - but I wouldn't trust China to follow them, so it might be easier to simply throw a cordon sanitaire around them from an SPS perspective in future.
    You are absolutely right. Viruses have jumped the species barrier throughout history. My point is that there is no so much more interaction (by virtue of our increasing population encroaching on places humanity has never lived before) so the chances of one of these events happening is so much higher.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    Animal_pb said:

    You can have my rare steak when you can prise it from my cold, dead hands.
    That doesn't sound very appetising; I'll pass.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    TOPPING said:

    Covid is not like the flu.

    But it might be that we will have to live with as many people dying of Covid as die of the flu each year. 28% of flu deaths are of those below 65yrs old.

    No one wants any of these diseases and if you or your family get one, or, god forbid, die of one it is a tragedy. But we have to live around them.
    I think it's also important to remember that COVID and influenza will be competing for the same host bodies every winter so it's not a case of simply adding COVID deaths on as a lump sum annual figure of say 30k extra deaths per year. That 30k per year dying of COVID would have been susceptible to dying of the flu or other diseases.

    As I said last night, I was quite reassured when Whitty said that we can't have a situation where we treat COVID deaths differently to any other death. Once we're in a place where COVID patients won't overwhelm the NHS we're going to have to learn to live with it by getting a booster shot once a year in September/October and then living as we normally would.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    DougSeal said:
    The very, very fastest you could speed it up is 3 weeks. As you need 2 weeks to detect if there is a rise in cases and a week to plan the unlock.

    But even that is breakneck fast as you might not be able to detect the rise in hospital admittance in two weeks.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,552
    edited February 2021
    theProle said:

    I think that is just SAGE demonstrating their absurd approach to life rooted in extreme safetism.

    The reality is that the *speed* of opening up makes no difference to the number of cases in the medium term. What matters is the total *extent* of opening up, and the size of the vaccinated population.

    Obviously whilst the vaccine program is still rolling out, there may be some need for restrictions, but I don't know which alternative universe SAGE are in if they think the rollout will take 9 months more.

    We will eventually end up in a "steady state" with most adults vaccinated, and no restrictions. This will lead to a certain level of cases, with which we will have to live.

    Once we've vaccinated everyone, what on earth are SAGE planning on waiting for?
    It's almost as if SAGE isn't looking forward to a world where we can make do without them...
  • Two of the most vociferous naysayers are former Tories. Scott and Alastair Meeks. My bitterness and bile is as a former Labourite. I think it's fair to say my bitterness and bile has been addressed to Corbyn, Drakeford and Johnson's Government in equal measure. Corbyn and Drakeford criticisms seem fine on here, but don't mess with Boris.

    Vaccine rollout on the Government's watch has been excellent, they are entitled, as the incumbent, to take credit for what goes well on their watch. Johnson's message yesterday was statesmanlike, even if the delivery was less so. There are many issues during the pandemic that haven't gone well. Government supporters appear ill prepared to accept any Governmental responsibility for this.

    Anyway, I promised RobD I was gone, so with that I'm dust.
    Scott, yes, but AM isn't a former Tory - he's a liberal technocratic centrist; a floating voter.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,234
    DougSeal said:

    In many ways novel influenzas are actually worse cf 1918-20.
    Won't most of us have either been affected or have a parent or grandparent affected by a flu variety ? The reason this one is so bad, although not a 1918-20 flu disaster is the lack of ANY sort of inherited immunity.
  • Same comments from the Netherlands and also Scottish & Welsh admins.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650
    moonshine said:

    I was intrigued that “saunas” will be allowed to open from mid May. A good chunk of policy makers are presumably pretty familiar with what really happens in there and still feel it’s less risky to open them than allow pubs to have unrestricted opening.
    Is that saunas over 55C for more than 10 minutes ? That is one version of the Corona deactivation temperature.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    Some people do take the p*ss. Just heard of someone heading off to Mexico because their "wife needs plastic surgery to repair an injury caused by being hit by a polo ball". Also just called a client whose ringtone definately indicates being in other, presumably sunnier, climes.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    Alistair said:

    The very, very fastest you could speed it up is 3 weeks. As you need 2 weeks to detect if there is a rise in cases and a week to plan the unlock.

    But even that is breakneck fast as you might not be able to detect the rise in hospital admittance in two weeks.
    I think the final step of June 21st is the one that is most likely to change, it could go either way too. If we don't see any massive rise in hospitalisations from the May unlock and the vaccine programme has reached a stage where all over 18s have been given at least one dose then I could see the June date being brought forwards by a couple of weeks.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    edited February 2021
    Smithers said:

    The bitterness and bile from a few presumably Labour supporters on here is remarkable.

    I think we all acknowledge that there have been some big mistakes in the way the UK handled this pandemic early on. But that we’re now one of the most successful countries on the planet with our vaccine rollout.

    Will lefties never be happy with British success?

    ON the 28 day measure 120,756 people have died of Covid
    33,517 of them died in January. That's over a quarter of the deaths of a year long pandemic in a single month. Last month.

    That's not big mistakes in the way the UK handled this pandemic early on. That's an utter disgraceful fuckup and dereliction of duty right now.
  • OllyTOllyT Posts: 5,035
    Cookie said:

    But we don't have an elected monarchy. We can't pick and choose which Windsor comes next.
    Personally, I'm a big fan of the queen, I think Charles has improved to 'wouldn't necessarily be the death knell of the monarchy' in recent years, I'm a fan of William and my opinion of Harry has slid from second favourite royal to 'only just better than Prince Andrew'. But my opinion is irrelevant. They will come in whatever order you choose, and if you are a monarchist you have to accept that. (You could take the niche position of arguing for an elected monarchy like medeival Denmark or Poland, I suppose.)

    In any case #2, Harry's older brother has so many children that his place in the line of succession is highly likely to remain of theoretical interest only.
    I am not a monarchist but it would have been fascinating to know what would have happened if Andrew had been born first and be next in line.

    On a completely different note, how many restaurants do we think will find it viable to reopen in April serving outside only? Very few is my guess - most won't be able to do anything like the numbers and in April in Britain every other day is likely to be a wash out.
This discussion has been closed.