My daughter is a nurse in the UK and she now has Covid
" depends on teh country last I heard, new zealand whooped covid's fuckin ass |
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Get the Vaccines out there and give it to all the Nurses and other Health personell which works with the shit everyday. But no, they say, wuhuu, we need to give to the elderly and such first.
And then I say: What is fucking wrong with you?! But is it enough? No, probably not. Producing Vaccines requires materials, resources, work and money. And when they think they nailed it all, more sick and dead people pops up. And now the Mutated Covid is upon us, which is far worse. I wonder what kind of Virus will be around next year. Because I think we may have quite a distance left to go, before you can see this as finished. After the Health personal been vaccined, all the idiots around should be taken care of. THEN all the rest should be taken care of. And other then that I will cross fingers. And take precautions rather then not. | |
Nowadays everyone considers himself the most important thing the world has ever had and likes to play drama queen on the social media, because.
For statistics: already had it twice the past year. Yet not a single tweet. " They'll have their waves later, when the rest have already been through that and recovered. That's how it works. This is a buff © 2016 The Experts ™ 2017 Last edited by torturo on Jan 27, 2021, 2:36:22 PM
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" NZ has a massive geographical advantage though, in addition to being irrelevant on global scale. UK, for example, had far more tourism in 2020 than NZ did in 2018 and 2019 combined. " Umm, health care personnel are a top priority for vaccination. |
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" imagine telling 4 million people that they're completely irrelevant based solely on the country that they were born in |
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The problem with focusing solely on healthcare personnel is based on the erroneous idea that they are the front-line against the virus.
Nope We are. You and I, going about our daily business, interacting with others, are the frontlines. The health sector is the last safety net. The ICU is the last resort, not where we want the battle to be fought. Because vaccines do require time, resources, work, and money to make, they are rationed. Obviously, healthcare workers come into contact with virus a lot more frequently than the lay person, and because PPE is also rationed, it makes sense to immunize the health sector. Even though y may point out they are primarily healthy young people. Old people are most likely to die all other things being equal - age > 80 is the #1 determinant of mortality. They are also at higher risk of catching the virus thanks to many seniors requiring assistance with a variety of daily activities, from shopping (contact with couriers and delivery persons) to bathing, showering, and living assistance (contact with health workers who already have a massive exposure/carrier risk). Basically two major groups who cannot self-isolate and practice social distancing, one because it's their professional responsibility to treat sick people, and one because they require contact with others to live safely and with dignity. A few other exceptions - primary family member caretakers living with vulnerable people; essential workers for ensuring food, water, electricity, and transit/comms; sanitation workers and of course, workers who make PPE and vaccines. The rest of us are considered low-priority because we can theoretically choose to stay away from sick people (in reality, people gotta work and pay bills without much protection from covid because our society doesn't have a strong grasp of acceptable risk and statistics). As such we can theoretically stop the virus from reaching our health systems entirely just by staying away from other people. Part of the consensus-favoured pandemic preparedness plan put forth by the CDC/NIAID in 2018 and abandoned, was ensuring every school age kid had a phone or laptop at home to attend virtual class in place, and every worker had access to online work opportunities if their service job ended due to business closures. Short of universal basic income to replace lost wages, this would have allowed many places to skip the second wave or mitigate it, remove pressure from rationed vaccines, and perhaps longer-term break the cycle of lockdowns/reopens/surges. [19:36]#Mirror_stacking_clown: try smoke ganja every day for 10 years and do memory game
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No, it doesn't matter whether healthcare is the first or the last line of defense, it's the most important one. We can lockdown the world, but we can't lockdown hospitals. HC workers being 'primarily healthy young people' is completely irrelevant as well; the nightmare scenario, after all, would be a symptomless super spreader within health care personnel.
To be brutally honest about it, in the big picture it matters more to "stop health care personnel from spreading the virus" than to "prevent health care personnel from catching the virus". It just happens that the former is most efficiently achieved through the latter. And it sounds nicer too. |
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" Fully agreed on that. First I thought wearing a mask should protect yourself. Then I found out that it should protect others if you are sick. If you are sick, you should be at home anyways. (Yes ofc you can be contagious, but you would wear a mask anyway) Its just genius to turn that around and make you the guilty. Now its a rule that manifests itself because you don't want to harm other people. Like you said before. It's your choice and responsabilty to stay healthy. I hope your daughter recovers well. Stay healthy Last edited by TheDeathX on Mar 8, 2021, 1:24:51 PM
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Really? Staying at home when sick? Who does this, or rather who did this before Covid-19. Doesn't matter if you have a flu or something - you go to work or someone else takes your job.
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Last edited by madermax2 on Mar 8, 2021, 5:03:24 PM
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