Like i said on here before, they had 6 cases in Walsgrave ICU the week my sister was admitted, all respiratory problems. Not sure if that is unusual but it sounded like it was,
I read something though that suggested it's a bit like our immunity to the common cold / flu, we're never fully immune but should be sufficiently for a reasonable enough period to get over the peak
Why do we need 80 million? We don't need it for anybody who has been tested for the virus already. With all the will in the world you are not going to test 80 million people in any short period of time.
Hopefully. Wonder if we'll see staff drafted to support London hospitals as they're the ones that have got the biggest issues you think, not that everywhere hasn't. That said, Hull has one case or did last time I looked.
The NHS isn't a national health service at all, there is no unified body, just hundreds of Trusts and Foundation Trusts and central purchasing bodies under taking procurement. This is what has led to this scenario.
The Trusts, many of which are in deficit are being told to make significant...
Do you want me to go over this again for you?
How many people in the UK died of TB in the last recorded year? 264
How many died of malaria? 6
Flu? 195
In the last 3 (Three) weeks 422 people have died from COVID-19 in the UK, extrapolated crudely over the year that's 7314
Yeah just been to my local Aldi, it was pretty decent and quiet as fuck. Still lacking bog roll etc but I got some essentials.
They've started selling Proper Job IPA at £1.49 [emoji1303]
Yep, plenty of cultural changes coming from this big bang. It's needed, it is beyond stupid that you've got such volumes of traffic on the road full of people driving into cities to sit in an office, when it's perfectly easy to do it from home.