Virus protection

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Re: Virus protection

Postby Derek Mowbray » 30 Mar 2020, 19:49

Can we wash our hands to The Shadows playing Happy Birthday.
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Re: Virus protection

Postby bazmusicman » 30 Mar 2020, 21:35

Derek Mowbray wrote:Can we wash our hands to The Shadows playing Happy Birthday.

Ha Ha..... :lol:
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Re: Virus protection

Postby bazmusicman » 30 Mar 2020, 21:36

petercreasey wrote:Has anyone had a phone call from a solicitor asking if they have been miss sold PPE?

Nice one.. :lol:
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Re: Virus protection

Postby artyman » 30 Mar 2020, 23:20

On a more serious note, I've just read this from a Doctor working in the NHS, it is worth passing it on.

Myself and my wife have got to go in to work in hospitals daily, to ensure that not only are our current patients dealt with, but that we are prepared for what is coming. That has meant back to back 70hr weeks for me and frankly, I've not got the mental capacity left to recall what the wife has done. We fall through the door at the end of each day, microwave something to eat and go to bed. Wash. Rinse. Repeat. I have underlying health conditions that put me at high risk. I have signed a waiver so that I can continue to support my teams and do my part to ensure there is a healthcare service for everyone that will need it. My teams, in due course, will be making decisions about who does and doesn't get life saving care. This is not scare mongering, it is fact.
2 weeks ago I sent home 80 staff with underlying health conditions who are at significant risk, to self isolate for 12 weeks. I'm sure most will appreciate the gravity of a decision like that in a healthcare setting. It is not taken lightly. But we may need them fit and well when we burn out.......

I'd add to that, in that I'm sure you're all aware that the creation of thousands of additional hospital beds, purchase of tens of thousands of ventilators, block purchasing of independent healthcare provider's facilities, mobilisation of the military to support NHS equipment and consumable deliveries, the cessation of all but extremely urgent elective surgery and financial support for those out of work, all at a cost of billions, should serve as writing on the wall, or indeed between the lines, that cannot escape you.

We are not front line, yet, but have enough links with those who currently are to know a bit more than the media spread around.

We have parents either significantly immunocompromised or living in a country where should they get sick, we will not see them before they die.

This week I have had nurses and surgeons in complete breakdown, as they have similarly high risk and highly dependent parents living with them. Can you appreciate the burden of potentially handing a loved one a death sentence?

Yet we return, each day, as do thousands of others, to make sure you and your loved ones will have access to care, not just for COVID related illness, but for urgent trauma too. Yes folks, people still do stupid things and still need treatment, COVID or not.

Tomorrow morning, myself and my teams will go in to work, along with thousands of others and risk our own health, mental and physical, to make sure the NHS continues to be able to look after society.

It isn't just about proximity to others, every surface you touch, if you have this, which doesn't always mean you're symptomatic, transfers risk to others and adds unnecessary pressure on an already stretched system. So too, do activities that increase the likelihood that you may end up in the back of an ambulance.

Have a care for those who will suffer the consequences of your decisions, through no fault of their own, in discharging what they see as their duty to society, in a time of need. And also those who serve behind cash registers, stack you supermarket shelves, take money for your fuel purchase and so on..........
Stay home. Save lives.


It's not just those in the high at risk category, anyone in any category should take it seriously, this is not a game! We are basically on a war footing, the problem is we can't see the enemy, so the only answer is to avoid contact with anyone or anything outside the home, as they present a risk. Yes it's hard, yes it's inconvenient, and yes it's boring, but if everyone adhered to this mindset it can significantly reduce if not eliminate infection, and the sooner everyone grasps that, the sooner we can all get back to normal. And THANKS
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Re: Virus protection

Postby Gruntfuttock » 30 Mar 2020, 23:52

Hi Artyman. Many thanks for posting the above. It makes for sobering reading - however - it is important to know exactly how things are!
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Re: Virus protection

Postby Stu's Dad » 31 Mar 2020, 03:33

I've yet to meet a doctor who would say 'Myself and my wife', or 'Myself and my teams'.
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Re: Virus protection

Postby shadowriter » 31 Mar 2020, 10:24

Stu's Dad wrote:I've yet to meet a doctor who would say 'Myself and my wife', or 'Myself and my teams'.


Are you suggesting this very frightening letter is fake? If so it's very sick.
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Re: Virus protection

Postby Stu's Dad » 31 Mar 2020, 12:44

It's very like the warnings that are frequently passed around on social media. They all claim to have been told by a medical professional or a university professor. The source is frequently as vague as 'my aunt's cleaner's cousin'.

No doctor or professor would have written that, I could write better English when I was twelve.

Len
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Re: Virus protection

Postby anniv 63 » 07 Apr 2020, 17:38

Well I received good news from my Doctor today that I can still enjoy sex at 75
As I live at number73, I can jump the back fence and have it off with his wife when he is
at his work!!!

Mike
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Re: Virus protection

Postby shadowriter » 07 Apr 2020, 17:45

Stu's Dad wrote:It's very like the warnings that are frequently passed around on social media. They all claim to have been told by a medical professional or a university professor. The source is frequently as vague as 'my aunt's cleaner's cousin'.

No doctor or professor would have written that, I could write better English when I was twelve.

Len
Thanks Len, that's reassuring. We can do without idiots posting
Scary stuff in scary times like these.

Norman
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