Saga Lout wrote: ↑Sun Jan 09, 2022 5:56 pm
Bwana wrote: ↑Sun Jan 09, 2022 3:55 pm
Saga Lout wrote: ↑Fri Jan 07, 2022 10:07 am
They are pandering to the risk averse when they should be acting for everybody. Once it was clear that COVID is a disease that predominantly attacks the old and otherwise vulnerable, the rest of you should have been encouraged to get on with your lives and those of us who are old or with compromised immune systems should have been advised, and if necessary helped, to shield themselves.
What does this look like in practice?
Everybody except the old and vulnerable go back to doing what they were doing before the lockdown. The old and vulnerable choose what level of risk they're comfortable with and act accordingly. (Which is, by the way, what should happen if a free country.)
Bwana wrote: ↑Sun Jan 09, 2022 3:55 pmMandatory vaccines for everyone?
It was April or May 2020, what do you think?
Bwana wrote: ↑Sun Jan 09, 2022 3:55 pmIsolation for anyone testing positive?
No. Test people with symptoms. If you;d gone to your doctor in 2019 and asked to be tested to see if you had flu because a work colleague was off sick with flu and you sat next to him in the works canteen a couple of days ago he'd have thought you were deranged.
Bwana wrote: ↑Sun Jan 09, 2022 3:55 pmWho gets tested? How often do they get tested?
See above
Bwana wrote: ↑Sun Jan 09, 2022 3:55 pmOldies and immunocompromised to stay at home? What happens to the jobs of the people in this category that are still working and need an income?
Most of us old gits are not working so we collect our pension whether we go out or stay at home. As for the rest, the same as happened to all those who were told to stop working and stay at home on 80% pay (if I remember correctly) but it would have been something like 10% of the number.
And the 90% would have continued contributing to the economy instead of being a drain on it.
Do any of your responses give consideration to long haulers? From what I'm reading it matters not if one was symptomatic or not. Almost a 3rd of the COVID-19 positive individuals end up with debilitating illness that can last months. This isn't a binary you either live or die disease. There are those who suffer long term effects and there's the matter of clogging a health care system that has shameful record for a wealthy country like the US.
As a vet I understand the limitations of testing entire populations vs testing symptomatic individuals in most diseases. This is important for statistical reasons related to sensitivity and specificity limitations of all tests as none have 100% sensitivity and specificity. This one poses a problem in that people are contagious before they're ill, so testing will be delayed and spread is enhanced. What made sense to me early on in the pandemic was testing people in areas with known outbreaks.
Mind you, the attitudes in the US may be a bit different from the attitudes in the UK. We've got a fair portion of the population that doesn't want any inconvenience for the sake of controlling spread. That includes old duffers. So they'll be out getting sick and clogging the health care system.
Also consider that in the US, obesity is an issue in all age groups. That renders them more susceptible to falling ill, again burdening the health care system. Not to mention the ramifications on employment. In the US there are large numbers of older individuals that are still in the labor force due to necessity, further complicating matters.
I'm 62 and immunocompromised due to splenectomy. My career puts me in contact with a fair number of people every day. I suspect I'm not alone. Tough shit, Bwana, suck it up?
You downplay vaccines as they weren't available at the outset, no shit. But they're available now and stand to lessen the impact on the vast majority of individuals. So, again, what of vaccines as time passes, why bother or good idea to require it for employment? We've got half the population railing against them after the disease got politicized.
The meatpacking industry in the US was particularly hard hit due to COVID-19. I'm not seeing that fitting in with the keep on working as per usual concept. Folks tend to get a bit work shy when they see their mates dropping like flies. I believe the positivity rate was something akin to 50% of the work force.
Sorry for the rambling nature of this post.