John Fedup
The Bunker Group
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- #401
IMO a confrontation with China is more likely than not. Now would not be ideal, in 5-10 years, much worse.
As a follow up, it appears that the condition temporarily named pediatric inflammatory multi-system syndrome (PIMS) or sometimes PIMS-TS for Temporarily associated with SARS-CoV-2, does not start to show symptoms until several weeks after the pediatric is infected by the SARS-CoV-2 virus. One of the 'interesting' things about this, is that at the point the PCR test is no longer a useful diagnostic tool, though anti-body testing can be. I am uncertain at present based off the information I have been able to find, but I suspect that it might be due to the PCR testing for active infection, specifically in the nasopharynx. If the syndrome does occur several weeks after first infection, then the patient's immune system would usually have fought off the infection. At present, it seems like PIMS might be caused by, or a side effect of, a severe immune system overreaction.That's the one I meant. Couldn't quite remember the name.
Yes, there is a transit problem in Toronto with ridership down 80%. The system is losing $90 million a month. Roads here very congested before COVID and without a transit recovery our roads will be chaos if people use their cars for the daily commute.Sydney is sort of open for business again but with limits of 12 passengers per bus and 32 for a train carriage, this clearly won't work. The extra 400,000 or more cars on the road isn't really helping either. Even when you get to work you need to queue in the foyer because of a two-person limit per lift.
We're down to daily totals of 0 new infections or 1 or maybe 2, but all they come from known clusters. The recovery rate is sitting at 97% and we have about 50 active cases at moment. Our schools, pubs, clubs, businesses are now open but social distancing is still in force and for pubs, clubs, restaurants, cafes, churches etc., are limited to a maximum of 100 people on the premises and groups are not allowed to contain more than 10 people. So that excludes wedding celebrations, funeral wakes, conferences etc. What we are really concerned about is the possibility that a second wave will occur, because the evidence from overseas has shown the long tail of the virus.As of 23 May 2020, 12pm, the Ministry of Health (MOH) has confirmed 642 new cases of COVID-19 infection in Singapore. Health Minister Gan Kim Yong said on that economic activities that do not pose a high risk of transmission will restart first on 2 Jun 2020. Schools will reopen but only a portion of students will attend school, while some cohorts will alternate between home-based learning and returning to school for lessons. All pre- school staff will undergo a one-time swab test for Covid-19 starting from Friday (May 15) before centres reopen.
Among the 31,068 COVID-19 cases from the start of this pandemic, there are currently:
Of the new cases, 99% are linked to known clusters, while the rest are pending contact tracing.
- Imported cases: 0
- Cases in the community: 11 (6 Singaporeans/PRs, 3 Work Pass holders, 2 Work Permit holders)
- Cases residing in dormitories: 631
927 more cases of COVID-19 infection have been discharged from hospitals or community isolation facilities. To date, 13,882 have fully recovered from the infection and have been discharged from hospitals or community isolation facilities.
Most of the 711 confirmed cases who are still in hospital are stable or improving. 8 are in critical condition in the intensive care unit.
16,452 cases who have mild symptoms, or are clinically well but still test positive for COVID-19 are isolated and cared for at community facilities.
23 have passed away from complications due to COVID-19 infection.
Good job in demonstrating competence in management of the virus in NZ.The recovery rate is sitting at 97% and we have about 50 active cases at moment. Our schools, pubs, clubs, businesses are now open but social distancing is still in force...
People picking on usa should take a look at the performance of uk with nearly 28000 dead and steadily climbing.
Uk's example is more striking as trump has given a mixed performance, he did stop direct flights from China quite early , but then decided to put the onus on states rather than taking a leadership role.
Uk's PM initially preached herd immunity, shook hands in hospitals and got serious only after he himself contracted the virus.
Since the PM has been in office for only a few months in uk , the failure is totally of the much heralded NHS. It seems this centrally controlled agency had no one advising the government on lockdowns or PPE procurement. And unfortunately the media was willing participants, putting out feel good stories while hundreds were dying daily in hospitals and old age homes. The deaths in old age homes due to negligence is a crime by any standards. Treating them as low priority patients and letting them die is not what a democratic government does.
Difference between the 2 countries is stark . While usa was upfront about the problems and fatalities, uk even till now is more concerned with preserving its image. Not the behavior of a old democracy ,more befitting a country like china.
I don't think Australia and NZ are more disciplined than others, in fact we're the opposite because we have a reputation for giving the one fingered salute to authority, and we do have a more relaxed easy going nature than the poms, yanks etc. I would suggest that it's more about mateship and doing what's right, more than anything else. You'll notice that everytime there's a disaster etc., both our peoples dig in and help mates out, even mates we didn't know 5 minutes ago. I think it's part of our heritage from 2 centuries ago when all of our peoples had to do that to survive in the bush on both sides of the ditch. It's something that's been passed down from one generation to the next.How various countries deal with this does say a lot about their culture. With the US is seems there is a battle going on between personal freedom and the common good. Countries like Japan, China, SK and Germany do indeed have a lot more discipline than many other countries. That the rather more relaxed cultures like Italy and Spain have done so badly probably shouldn't be a surprise. Not sure why Australia and NZ are doing so well. Perhaps we are far more disciplined than I thought we were.
Yes although I do think we also benefited from the fact that the messaging from our leadership was more consistent with the information coming out of the scientific community as the crisis unfolded. The US has been able to rally in response to crises before (9/11 springs to mind) but I fear the mixed messages emanating from Washington culminated in a situation where the opportunity to implement effective lockdown measures was missed, which squandered the opportunity to create a galvanised nationwide response.I don't think Australia and NZ are more disciplined than others, in fact we're the opposite because we have a reputation for giving the one fingered salute to authority, and we do have a more relaxed easy going nature than the poms, yanks etc. I would suggest that it's more about mateship and doing what's right, more than anything else. You'll notice that everytime there's a disaster etc., both our peoples dig in and help mates out, even mates we didn't know 5 minutes ago. I think it's part of our heritage from 2 centuries ago when all of our peoples had to do that to survive in the bush on both sides of the ditch. It's something that's been passed down from one generation to the next.
I suspect you are being too kind with regards to US leadership during the current pandemic. What I find disconcerting is the news that the US CDC, as well as at least the state of Georgia, is combining the number of diagnostic and serology tests performed when they post test results. This co-mingling of test numbers concerns me because it impacts the validity of the testing results data which is being used to justify easing restrictions on containment efforts. As it is, no US state has really met the criteria the CDC set out to start a phased easing of containment efforts. If it turns out that the data was/is overly rosy, then both the citizens and policymakers have been operating with a false sense of security. Now I am not one for conspiracy theories, but given some of the information which has come out from different states as well as the Federal gov't, I have to question whether or not the statistics have been massaged in order to support policy, as opposed to policy being driven by data.Yes although I do think we also benefited from the fact that the messaging from our leadership was more consistent with the information coming out of the scientific community as the crisis unfolded. The US has been able to rally in response to crises before (9/11 springs to mind) but I fear the mixed messages emanating from Washington culminated in a situation where the opportunity to implement effective lockdown measures was missed, which squandered the opportunity to create a galvanised nationwide response.
As an update to the above, it has now come out that the testing numbers for at least 11 US states combined both the virology and serology test numbers, in addition to the numbers from the CDC.I suspect you are being too kind with regards to US leadership during the current pandemic. What I find disconcerting is the news that the US CDC, as well as at least the state of Georgia, is combining the number of diagnostic and serology tests performed when they post test results. This co-mingling of test numbers concerns me because it impacts the validity of the testing results data which is being used to justify easing restrictions on containment efforts. As it is, no US state has really met the criteria the CDC set out to start a phased easing of containment efforts. If it turns out that the data was/is overly rosy, then both the citizens and policymakers have been operating with a false sense of security. Now I am not one for conspiracy theories, but given some of the information which has come out from different states as well as the Federal gov't, I have to question whether or not the statistics have been massaged in order to support policy, as opposed to policy being driven by data.
Not just more disciplined populations but also good leadership, both sadly lacking in the UK and USA. Brazil is now suffering for the same reasons. It's not hard for governments to do the right thing during the start of a pandemic, just follow the advice of the experts. Reopening is harder as there are more uncertainties. You also don't want to have to reimpose significant nationwide restrictions, getting the cork back into the bottle can the difficult.In addition to distancing and good tracing, what do SK, Japan, and to a large extent Germany have in common? I think the answer is disciplined populations. As an island nation like Japan, the UK had a partial advantage over land connected EU nations but intense quarantine measures require testing and tracing. The UK and US aren’t the only states stuffing this up.
Many, many years ago, I spent a day with an American health academic who was responsible (and eventually failed) for Mr Clintons attempts to bring in a some form of universal healthcare in the US. In discussion why it failed, of which there were many, he said there was a fundamental difference between Americans and Australians in that Australians were more likely to try to reach a consensus about an issue and were more conciliatory than Americans. I would presume the same applies to Kiwis. Social consensus and conciliation are helpful for the 'common good' and the response to pandemics in democracies requires a sense of the 'common good'.How various countries deal with this does say a lot about their culture. With the US is seems there is a battle going on between personal freedom and the common good. Countries like Japan, China, SK and Germany do indeed have a lot more discipline than many other countries. That the rather more relaxed cultures like Italy and Spain have done so badly probably shouldn't be a surprise. Not sure why Australia and NZ are doing so well. Perhaps we are far more disciplined than I thought we were.