I'm off to Gibraltar as soon as I can, as a "working" place it doesn't really shut down for tourists so it doesn't matter what time of year you go. If the Skull Bar isn't open, I'll sit outside with a four-pack until they do.problem is - a lot off the smaller islands are shutting down now. I know someone in Lanzarote the other week and it was fairly dead.
tenerife might be bit better As it’s bigger
Thing is...that's not true. Hospitals are not full. Not even close.Especially as the Netherlands is about to start exporting it’s Covid-19 patients to Germany because hospitals will soon be full.
That is interesting. The reports I read suggested that this happened in wave 1 too. I guess if they dont have the staff, the capacity reduces. To be fair, in the UK the hospitals were never full to capacity, but the big issue here was the refusal to admit the elderly despite this. Re personnel, in the UK the hospital personnel are asked to turn off the track and trace app before work! But as @Hally said, we aren’t seeing personnel being stood down on a large scale due to infection. The PPE must be working here.Thing is...that's not true. Hospitals are not full. Not even close.
But there is no medical personnel cause when there's one of one department coughing or sneezing they all have to get tested (still PCR) and sometimes a whole team is quarantined for 10-14 days. So there is no medical personnel because of our own rules. We have room and beds but no nurses and doctors.
I think it's a catch 22 situation.That is interesting. The reports I read suggested that this happened in wave 1 too. I guess if they dont have the staff, the capacity reduces. To be fair, in the UK the hospitals were never full to capacity, but the big issue here was the refusal to admit the elderly despite this. Re personnel, in the UK the hospital personnel are asked to turn off the track and trace app before work! But as @Hally said, we aren’t seeing personnel being stood down on a large scale due to infection. The PPE must be working here.
I trust the numbers, Canary Islands simply have less virus cases. They also have way less Covid deaths per million people than Spain overall (120 vs. 735). And deaths cannot be easily hidden by doing less testing.So, considering whether to take the family to Tenerife for Xmas, if the 'non-essential travel' advice is lifted and normal travel insurance is therefore available. Can anyone who has spent more time looking at this comment on their much lower cases per million people?
Wouldn't countries sharing borders with others in the EU normally transfer patients across borders when they find it convenient? Example, if you were a heart or cancer (or whatever) patient in Heerlen in the NL, and the nearest specialist unit was in Aachen (D) just across the border, it would defy logic to send them further in an emergency just to be in the same country.Thing is...that's not true. Hospitals are not full. Not even close.
But there is no medical personnel cause when there's one of one department coughing or sneezing they all have to get tested (still PCR) and sometimes a whole team is quarantined for 10-14 days. So there is no medical personnel because of our own rules. We have room and beds but no nurses and doctors.
Hospital staff gets tested because of whatever reason (family member with a cold or whatever), PCR test is positive (still not sure if the person has Covid then) but everyone in his/her team gets send off and has to quarantine for 10 days. Even if it's not ICU personnel, it puts pressure on the entire hospital staff and beds.
This is not just the virus at work, this is the result of our own rules. PCR test positive = quarantine for you and people you worked with.
I don't have the solution. Just saying it's a catch 22. We need better trustworthy tests instead of the PCR that shows a major false positive percentage, that's the only solution I can think of right now. If we had a better trustworthy test we would have enough staff and no semi-lockdown and moving patients around.So what is the solution then? Ignore the test or don't do it all, and hope that the medical staff don't have the virus??
I think in doing so, you would turn hospital wards into mortuaries. These other diseases and ailments that you keep talking about, they're not going to mix well with Covid on top
The difference with march/april is...we had a whole freaking summer to prepare in terms of staff, emergency hospitals etc.So it would be fair to say, that at the moment, the best solution would be not to further risk the health of vulnerable hospital admissions and err on the side of caution
Whether it's a lack of trained staff or a lack of beds, a lack of capacity amounts to the same thing
I care for people who are 80+ but if you're saying you want to save all of them from dying.....we and them should stay inside forever.And how do you care for people who are 80+ or have serious illness? Or do you mean just put them all together with no care and let them die?
I think I saw something that reckoned you would need about 4M-5M people to isolate to ‘protect the vulnerable’ in terms of the actual vulnerable and the carers Supporting them.
I care for people who are 80+ but if you're saying you want to save all of them from dying.....we and them should stay inside forever.
Do you know what the average life expectancy in the world is? https://ourworldindata.org/life-expectancy
I do. By seperating them until there's a vaccin.So you don’t really believe in protect the vulnerable then?
Buying people shopping isn’t ‘care’ - what about those with disabilities, those that cannot dress, shower, bath etc. You need carers to then also fully isolate with them to be able to care otherwise you risk infection when they are not workingI do. By seperating them until there's a vaccin.
They need care so we need solid testing for care staff.
Make everyone a 'volunteer' to do shopping for the elderly.
Keep them seperated from the non-risk group as much and long as possible. Let them take the vaccin and let the young build up herd immunity.