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• #4402
So my girlfriend is pregnant (and a teacher). From that press conference it sounds like she's meant to stay at home for the next 12 weeks, did I get that right?
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• #4403
I'm sure the main thing that Johnson's really worried about is that he'll have to delay 'Brexit'.
I'm 98% sure Brexit will be delayed by at least a year. And no one will even notice.
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• #4404
Some very wishy washy provisions from Boris there. I still get the impression he wants Covid to sweep through the nation wiping out a huge chunk of elderly who he considers a burden on the state.
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• #4405
The messaging has been my issue lately. I can't see how people make sense of what instructions to follow and don't end up confused by it all. Has a feeling of 'on the hoof (ness)' which doesn't instil confidence.
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• #4406
Some very wishy washy provisions from Boris there. I still get the impression he wants Covid to sweep through the nation wiping out a huge chunk of elderly who he considers a burden on the state.
And, as was pointed out last time this conspiracy theory was shared, a huge chunk of his voters?
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• #4407
Only problem with that is that he's then wiped out the core Tory-voting bloc; but then in typical Johnson fashion that might be a problem left for his successor...
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• #4408
And the (understandable) omnipresence of virus news is definitely depressing in a generalised way.
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• #4409
Genuine question that concerns me: having followed both German and British developments, with similar numbers of verified cases, the U.K. has already 55 deaths but Germany only 19? I am aware that the number of positive tests is not really a meaningful number given how few people are being tested in the first place.
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• #4410
That’s what I understood, although he seemed to say that pregnant women were included in the vulnerable people category ‘as a precaution’. I think impact on pregnant women not yet fully clear.
Very concerning the lacking clarity, just found out that my partner is pregnant too
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• #4411
Not only that but the data on cases is out there publicly, and he'd obliterate his party's and his own credibility for a generation if our mortality rate is significantly higher than anyone else's. A stupid conspiracy theory.
Imagine the campaign - "your party killed half a million old people" - there's no way back from that
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• #4412
the U.K. has already 55 deaths but Germany only 19
Because death rates don't increase incrementally and the virus has yet to peak in either country. There are going to be good days (not many deaths) and bad days (spates of deaths).
But if you're wondering is there something we could have done to prevent the deaths that Germany did, probably not.
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• #4413
Regarding the comment a couple of pages back on the hospitality industry and insurance, the fact is the vast majority of businesses, including the hospitality sector, have no insurance to fall back on.
Since SARS, insurers rewrote commercial insurance policies to define the specific diseases they would provide revenue protection cover for. They will generally only insure risk they know about and can quantify.
A couple of insurers still provide a blanket coverage for any Notifiable Disease, but usually with a capped limit of between £25k and £50k.
A couple more insurers have other badly drafted “Public Authorities” revenue protection extensions in their wordings that might allow a successful claim via the backdoor. But the majority of insurers exclude disease as a trigger under this extension.
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• #4414
mazzeltov!
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• #4415
Yes thanks that was my question
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• #4416
Bet you they're waiting for the Easter break to kick in. Then they'll leave them closed.
Easter can't come soon enough for some. -
• #4417
Thank you, very kind
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• #4418
Work emailed out the PHE health advice earlier and stated no intention to close our offices, Boris now seems to of said that should happen but obviously everyone has left for the day, not sure a 5pm update is the best timing for businesses
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• #4419
Imagine the campaign - "your party killed half a million old people" - there's no way back from that
"Yeah, but Labour would raise taxes."
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• #4420
100% on complacency although not sure how much of that is down to “we’ve no idea what to do” (which I get but it’s no reassurance when these are our leaders).
Completely irrelevant and focusing on the wrong things, but can you imagine comments from central government if local government acted like this.....
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• #4421
I guess the not locking things down but instead advising people to avoid them is the behavioural science nudging stuff kicking in to ensure compliance by easing people into it. Fascinating if so.
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• #4422
Maybe partly that, but I suspect it's mainly £££...
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• #4423
Yep. Not sure how this ties in with things like midwife appointments, scans and NCT.
Also not sure what I'm meant to be doing. Pregnant woman isolating but the person she lives with not seems to have some flaws.
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• #4424
We are 35/6 weeks along and assumed the same. Better go panic buy everything...
Should I be off too to stop bringing it home to them?
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• #4425
Can't help but feel that we'd have been better off if Covid-19 had gone completely undetected.
Just... no.
Everything going on now is to stop a huge wave crashing the limited resources of the NHS. Death rate would be much higher than 1% if it somehow 'caught us unaware'. Have you been watching much of the news? (Genuine question).