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The Daily Sceptic
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Do Doctors Care That Their Strikes Are Killing Patients?

by In-house doctor
6 April 2023 3:00 PM

This week the death of Nigel Lawson was announced. Readers may be aware that Margaret Thatcher’s prominent Chancellor famously compared the NHS to a “national religion”. The second part of his observation is more rarely quoted – to the effect that those who work within the NHS system regard themselves as a kind of priesthood.

Lawson’s remarks were rarely so appropriate. The week following his death will see four days of consecutive strike action by junior doctors, accompanied by familiar incantations about how they are withdrawing their labour to save the NHS. The demand for a 35% pay rise is of course necessary to protect the system from the evil Tory Government and the privatisation agenda. Should readers wish to access any more of this propagandised pap, they are welcome to read the mainstream media. Here at the Daily Sceptic, we aim to provide more substantial analysis and to discuss the real issues behind the news – commentary which in polite society would certainly be characterised as ‘wrongthink’.

Many professional groups gripe about pay and conditions – disagreements between doctors and the state are by no means new. Doctors have taken industrial action of varying intensity on several occasions before, most recently in the junior doctors strike of 2016. The British Medical Association (the doctors trade union) has a longstanding tradition of opposing virtually every government policy, often in the interests of enhancing professional remuneration. So far, so normal.

On this occasion, however, I do think the current militancy represents something of a sea change in medical behaviour. This is a consequence of various structural changes in medical workforce matters over the past decade. It is important for readers to appreciate that the term ‘junior doctor’ covers a wide spectrum of practitioner, ranging from very recent medical graduates in their early twenties to senior trainees in their mid-thirties. In fact, the term itself is outdated and a better descriptor would probably be ‘doctors in training’ or similar. More senior trainees often have a different perspective than their younger colleagues. It is striking (excuse the pun) that the current junior doctor leadership seems to be drawn from the more inexperienced section of the junior doctor community.

The strike next week is the second round of the dispute. The first strike in March was unprecedented, in that junior doctors absented themselves from emergency cover for an entire 72-hour period.  Readers may not appreciate what a big deal that is – to spell it out, the striking doctors refused to staff emergency rotas. This action left patients arriving to A&E departments with acute heart attacks, diabetic crises, strokes, car crash injuries and the like, with zero medical care. They also withdrew ward cover, so patients in hospital unfortunate enough to develop post-operative complications had no doctors to look after them. That’s apparently what it takes to save the NHS.

In actual fact, the first strike turned out to be a bit of a damp squib. Hospitals managed quite effectively to reallocate consultant level doctors to cover emergency and ward work. Paradoxically, emergency care pathways were more efficient than usual, as senior decision makers processed patients much faster than trainee doctors. This of course came at the cost of cancelling the vast majority of routine outpatient appointments and operative procedures – adding still further to the legacy of lockdown.

Managing the second round of strikes might not be so easy. The second round has been deliberately timed for after the Easter weekend, when a lot of consultants will be away on leave. In effect, the strike leadership is ensuring that there will be no routine work carried out in the NHS for a 10-day period. Major operations can’t be undertaken if there is doubt about the provision of 24/7 medical care, so no significant procedures can be done safely in the days leading up to the strike action. It is notable that senior hospital managers have been encouraging consultants to engage with the press emphasising the risk to patients – normally managers hate doctors talking to the press, but in this case there seems to be an intention to undermine the strike. It is unlikely that round two will be the end of this dispute and further escalation is quite possible. It is inconceivable that these young doctors are unaware of the effect their action will have on patient care. It is highly likely that some patients will be harmed as a result of this strike and some may well die as a direct consequence of industrial action – this is several orders of magnitude more significant than not being able to get on a train for a few days.

Readers may very well be wondering how it has come to this. Until recent times, a doctors strike would have been inconceivable. Of course, the charge is often levelled that older clinicians tediously harp on about how much better things were in the ‘olden days’. For clarity I should state that things were not better, but they were certainly different. As this dispute is ostensibly about money and conditions, readers may be interested in a comparison of junior doctors’ pay rates in the late 1980s with the modern-day equivalent.

Until a decade ago, hospital-level care was delivered by small teams of doctors, called ‘firms’. A typical firm comprised one or two consultants, a senior trainee and two or three other juniors. Being on a good firm was hard work but great fun. Patients got an excellent deal from the ‘firm’ structure, because it provided continuity of care – the same doctors looking after the patient throughout their time in hospital and afterwards in outpatients. Payment for medical time was split into four-hour blocks known as a UMT (unit of medical time) – so the standard 40 hour week comprised 10 UMT’s, paid at a basic rate. Junior doctors then had compulsory ‘on call’ UMTs – the standard for a one-in-three on call rota was 13 additional UMT’s. These were paid at 30% of the standard rate – please note, that is 30% of standard, not 130%. Junior doctors on call were the lowest paid workers in the hospital, with an hourly rate of pay less than that of the cleaners – far lower than the current remuneration. On the upside, the work was so intense and the hours so long that junior doctors were provided with hospital accommodation free of charge. Work life balance was perfect, because work and life were the same thing.

The reason I point this out is that low hourly pay rates for junior doctors is not news. Nor is it a secret. It cannot come as a surprise to any newly qualified doctor that the pay in the early years of medical practice is not great. About 15 years ago, the structure of junior doctor terms and conditions changed substantially. The ‘firm’ structure was abolished and on-call rotas were changed to shift patterns. The driving force behind this change was the assertion that long hours were dangerous for patients and damaging to doctors. There was some truth in this view – mistakes were made by tired junior doctors, myself included. Unfortunately, the cure turned out to be worse than the problem.

Loss of the firm structure demolished continuity of care and made the whole process of looking after patients very inefficient. The complicated shift systems proved unwieldy, inflexible and very unpopular with juniors. Not surprisingly, junior doctors remained unhappy with their pay and conditions – they were doing far fewer hours work than their predecessors and therefore lost free accommodation. Total pay reduced (because of a lower on-call commitment) and workforce surveys revealed far lower levels of job satisfaction than under the old regime. The numbers of doctors in training increased substantially, but their pay fell in real terms, because each individual was doing less work. Needless to say, this was entirely predictable and indeed was predicted at the time the changes were proposed.

Discontent with shift-working and its remuneration formed the basis of the 2016 strike, which ended in a comprehensive defeat for the doctors. A face-saving, window-dressing compromise was agreed which failed to address any of the real grievances. The current dispute in many ways is continuity 2016, driven by a more militant and explicitly Left-wing cadre of political activists.

It is often trumpeted by the BMA that as a consequence of poor remuneration, U.K.-trained doctors are leaving for jobs in Australia. Ironically, the doctors union fails to ask why Australian doctors have a much better deal than their British counterparts working in the socialist utopia of the NHS. Might it be because the Australians have a mixed health economy, where hospital systems are competing for a finite medical workforce and therefore provide better terms and conditions? Isn’t this the same mixed economy model that the BMA regards as unsuitable for the U.K.? There must be a fair amount of cognitive dissonance going on in BMA House – but then the doctors’ union is adept at that and the wilful blindness that goes with it.

I think the real cause of the juniors strike actually lies in disappointed aspirations. Indoctrinated medical graduates have been led to believe that possession of a medical degree guarantees membership of the NHS ‘nomenklatura’. The reality is that doctors are simply part of the lumpen proletariat, with little influence or bargaining power. The likely resolution of this dispute is hard to predict at the moment. A lot will depend on how cohesive the strike is as the dispute escalates. The BMA junior committee has started with a very intense and prolonged industrial action. The Government will not give in easily, so the expectation must be that the strike committee will raise the ante. As walkouts become more prolonged, it is quite possible that their members may return to work, concerned about loss of pay and the effect on patients. More senior trainee doctors may worry about the effect on their training and future career prospects. It is not inconceivable that the vanguard of the proletariat could yet end up marching on its own.

The author, the Daily Sceptic‘s in-house doctor, is a former NHS consultant now in private practice.

Tags: AustraliaDoctorsNHSNHS CrisisStrikes

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29 Comments
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Pete Sutton
Pete Sutton
3 years ago

All these covid patients “surging’ into hospital — how do they actually get into hospital (I mean the ones who are in hospital because they have covid, not the ones who pick it up while they’re there)? Who decides they need to be hospitalised, and how do they decide without actually seeing the sufferer?

35
-2
Arum
Arum
3 years ago
Reply to  Pete Sutton

That’s something I’ve been wondering too

15
0
realarthurdent
realarthurdent
3 years ago
Reply to  Pete Sutton

They are driven there in an ambulance following their car accident, and test positive for COVID on arrival.
Or their dad drives them there following their football injury, and they test positive for COVID on arrival.
Or they collapse on the A&E doorstep from undiagnosed diabetes, and test positive for COVID in hospital.
Or they arrive in the middle of a heart attack due to an undiagnosed heart condition, and test positive for COVID in hospital.
Or they survive an attempted suicide with broken bones and a head injury, and test positive for COVID in hospital.
Or they have a fall at home due to their Alzheimer’s, and test positive for COVID in hospital.

41
0
Beowulf
Beowulf
3 years ago
Reply to  realarthurdent

Or they arrive having suffered a stroke caused by the ‘booster’.

30
-1
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
3 years ago
Reply to  Pete Sutton

Secret NHS Plot To Kill Disabled Children
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cWJdiFpZ7Dc&list=WL&index=92

Teenagers with autism and Down’s syndrome were offered ‘Do Not Resuscitate’ orders during routine appointments with their GP during the pandemic, it has emerged.
Many parents believe their child has been ‘discriminated against’ and say they were only asked about the order because of their learning disability. 
The DNR orders were reportedly offered following ‘concerns about the pressure on the NHS’ – but it has left families confused and ‘upset’. Andre Walker

Stand in the Park Sundays 10am make friends & keep sane 
Wokingham – Howard Palmer Gardens Cockpit Path car park Sturges Rd RG40 2HD  

Telegram Group 
http://t.me/astandintheparkbracknell

7
0
Hester
Hester
3 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

The new world order does not want the old, the disabled, and the disobedient as all eugenic programmes seek only the perfect specimens to survive.

4
0
BS665
BS665
3 years ago

Glad Daily Sceptic is finally being recognised for uncovering these falsehoods.

When will the culprits be identified and prosecuted? Or will blame be spread around or covered up?

If everyone was ‘just following orders’ to ignore and censor the truth, the order givers in gov must pay the price.

I believe this will occur, and relish their gradual persecution.

40
0
chris-ds
chris-ds
3 years ago
Reply to  BS665

Who is a actually recognising the DS?

I only heard about this from guido and initially assumed it was yet another tin hat site.

if it had a better name it would be easier to share the articles and analysis. You share an article & everyone is like “Daily Sceptic!! So you ARE into conspiracies!! I thought you knew better than that!”

The guardian or telegraph won’t prominently link to or credit a site called “Daily Sceptic” either. Maybe it should be called “News Analysed” or maybe “Sodium”.

if it had a more credible name it’s mission would be easier and maybe attract less of the far out and more reasoned and rationale.

9
-6
BS665
BS665
3 years ago
Reply to  chris-ds

You have a point. Personally I think the name is fine. No name can guarantee uptake. I guess this site is niche, yet its work has been prophetic as well as a vital public record of the horseshit we’re suffering. Gov has chosen to ignore it. You cant force people to open their eyes.

18
0
BS665
BS665
3 years ago
Reply to  BS665

To answer precisely: DS is recognised by sceptics and ‘turning covidians’. One day it will go down in history. So I guess we’re all ‘too cool for school’ early adopters 😎

Last edited 3 years ago by BS665
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mishmash
mishmash
3 years ago
Reply to  chris-ds

No, please don’t change the name and self-censor to appease the weak minded, afraid of associating with truth seeking people because they can’t handle reality.

Last edited 3 years ago by mishmash
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Draper233
Draper233
3 years ago
Reply to  chris-ds

Daily Sceptic means that we should be sceptical of everything until data and evidence is produced that gives the information some validity, including information on our own side of the argument (and I have to stress, although there is a general consensus on Covid-related issues on here, posts will get challenged if they make claims without supporting evidence).

Similarly you have new media outlets like UK Column that openly tell it’s viewers not to take what they’re saying on trust, but to research it for themselves.

I’m not that interested in controlled legacy outlets like the Telegraph and the Guardian – they’re deservedly in decline and the level of misinformation they’ve spread over the last 21 months shows why.

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DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
3 years ago
Reply to  BS665

The culprits are already receiving their just desserts, gongs for Whitty, Van Tam, Harries and the MHRA head. And if that’s not sickening enough the war criminal Bliar gets 2. All the awards must have been for services to fucking up the economy, our children’s education and the health of every person with a chronic illness that wasn’t Wuflu

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emel
emel
3 years ago

So after nearly two years of national emergency, I still haven’t come across anyone who can tell me that they have had this thing. My wife and I caught bad colds over in Holland end of January 2019, but who knows? So I still believe that this has all been concocted. I’ve never worn a mask or used holy hand wash, never kept my distance, and will never partake of the lethal injection. And just watched as the our country and the rest of the World dissolves into complete financial disaster. Welcome to the End of the World.

35
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SJR
SJR
3 years ago
Reply to  emel

I had what I presume was the Delta variant at the end of August – all the classic symptoms except I didn’t have any real breathing issues, possibly because I do a lot of running and have good lung capacity. Confirmed via PCR and antibody tests, so it does exist.

It was probably the most unpleasant illness I’ve ever had (not the most serious – I’ve had meningitis!) but it definitely felt like an unnatural illness as the symptoms are really weird, unpleasant, and varied.

I was pretty bad for two weeks and ended up having a month in total off work, so it can be serious for some people.

I fully agree though that the response to the disease has been far, far, worse than the illness itself. If we didn’t have a way to test for this bug we’d just treat it like one of those weird seasonal bugs that pop up from time to time and just carry on as normal.

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Oscarone
Oscarone
3 years ago
Reply to  SJR

In which way are “the symptoms ….. really weird, unpleasant, and varied”. Could you describe them? Just curious.

Last edited 3 years ago by Oscarone
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crisisgarden
crisisgarden
3 years ago
Reply to  Oscarone

I can describe mine. General aching especially hips and legs, one night of mild fever and profound loss of taste and smell for around 2 weeks. At no point would I even have taken a day off work it was so mild. But yes, I would describe the symptoms as ‘weird’; unlike anything I’ve had before. And this is to be expected given that this is a man-made bioweapon with documented patents stretching back to the late 90s.

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Paul_Somerset
Paul_Somerset
3 years ago
Reply to  Oscarone

Like emel, I still don’t know a single person in real life who’s had this thing. But I did have a cold/cough back in about 2015, which was the only cold/cough I’ve had in the last 17 years (I’m 60 now). And that illness was odd. I mean, I wasn’t particularly unwell, apart from a persistent cough. Indeed, I remember cycling two or three miles to the shops one day to get some cough mixture, which didn’t work. But I distinctly remember a couple of times feeling genuinely worried that this felt weird, and I wasn’t sure what was happening. A cough but no sneezing. Tiredness that you couldn’t put your finger on..

Anyway, it all went away in, oh I don’t know, two or three weeks. But that memory of something unusually wrong going on has stayed with me. Sorry I can’t be more specific, but there you go.

I do wonder though – what did happen to SARS-One? Did it really just disappear off the face of the Earth, or did it do what SARS-2 would have done if the Chinese Communist Party hadn’t sent out those videos of pedestrians spontaneously dropping dead? Just mutated into something more easily tolerated, and ignored?

6
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realarthurdent
realarthurdent
3 years ago
Reply to  Oscarone

I had COVID at Easter, so an LFT I did reluctantly afterwards told me.
Started on a Friday night with a headache and fever. Sore throat but no cough over the weekend. And then general fatigue for the rest of that week (i’d have had a couple of days off work if I hadn’t been working from home). Completely better by the following Monday. So a 10 day illness.

It was worse than a normal cold but not as bad as a few of the asthma attacks I used to have when I was younger.

3
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The Rule of Pricks
The Rule of Pricks
3 years ago
Reply to  emel

I had it first week of December. My 12 year was sent home from school (like his entire year group) until he had tested negative. He had a cold – usual stuff – but tested positive.

The wife and I both had Xmas lunches on the Friday and spent the Saturday with screaming hangovers which never went away and put us both in bed. The hangover ‘symptoms’ simply morphed into Covid ‘symptoms’ and lasted about 4 days. Out of bed on day 2 and fully functioning on day 5.

The brain fog (once the hangover had passed!) was weird but for me the weirdest symptom was screaming shoulder pain. I had a serious shoulder operation about 3 months ago and although I had no post-op pain, with Covid both shoulders (the operated on one and the other one) were agony.

My shoulder surgeon said this is a known (in the medical world) side effect of Covid, and even more so post vaccine, but it hasnt been covered by the MSM. Incidences of frozen shoulder are up 1000% but the only times Ive seen it mentioned was in the Metro!

No breathing issues or any of that stuff though. Had a pint after a week and it tasted exactly the same.

5
0
amanuensis
amanuensis
3 years ago

What they want to do is update their methodology and then claim that the remarkable reduction in hospitalisations/deaths is due to the vaccines.

16
0
BJs Brain is Missing
BJs Brain is Missing
3 years ago

Three cheers for the excellent Daily Sceptic and its brilliant and courageous contributors. The tide is definitely turning.

42
0
BS665
BS665
3 years ago
Reply to  BJs Brain is Missing

Agreed. But it isn’t turning, in my view.

8
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BJs Brain is Missing
BJs Brain is Missing
3 years ago
Reply to  BS665

My mother and two aunties have changed sides in recent weeks. I also know of others. Anecdotal I know, but one can hope there are more. Most online comments I see these days are also against any more restrictions etc.

20
0
BS665
BS665
3 years ago
Reply to  BJs Brain is Missing

That’s a good sign. Until gov announces it’s over and never brings back restrictions, we’re just ‘awakened slaves’. Better than just slaves but not much better.

6
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Catee
Catee
3 years ago
Reply to  BS665

My daughters inlaws were avid maskers and eagerly accepted the first two shots. My daughter has been patient but persistent in pointing out the inconsistencies in the government narrative – the inlaws are now sans mask everywhere and have declined the booster.

Last edited 3 years ago by Catee
20
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BS665
BS665
3 years ago
Reply to  Catee

My parents are both double jabbed, but not boostered. My father still wears a mask in shops, but now despises Bojo, and has come round to the point of view of supporting me and my sister in our trials at work. My mother, bless her, will do whatever my dad says.

It will still be a bloody slow and hard road to ‘normal normalcy’.

11
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Draper233
Draper233
3 years ago
Reply to  BS665

Anecdotally, I have spoken to several people who are double-jabbed and boosted and are adamant that they’re not having any more jabs.

We’ll see.

But I agree that until governments are limited to simple advice and guidance, this will never be truly over. The problem is that we need politicians and “experts” to repudiate every crackpot policy they’ve recommended, including mass vaccination. Not going to happen without political change.

11
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The Rule of Pricks
The Rule of Pricks
3 years ago

It would be nice to see Toby rip the tits off (metaphor in case of any misunderstanding – not literally) Karen Brady in the HoL wouldnt it……

7
-2
Arum
Arum
3 years ago
Reply to  The Rule of Pricks

I would rather see the House of Lords abolished completely

17
0
AngusAttitude
AngusAttitude
3 years ago

‘why this problem would not immediately vanish if we simply stopped testing asymptomatic people?’

Because then the whole ‘pandemic’ would disappear together with the political, intellectual and moral integrity of all the state’s vested interests.

16
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Douglas Brodie
Douglas Brodie
3 years ago

The level of Covid deaths in November/December 2020 was entirely normal for midwinter respiratory illnesses, see https://dailysceptic.org/what-does-endemic-covid-look-like/, scroll down to the first graph. So the level of December 2021 has actually been well below the average.
 
The January 2021spike in deaths was due to the vaccine rollout. We know this spike was due to the vaccines because this video animation, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xSrc_s2Gqfw, shows that the same thing happened in many countries around the world as they started their own vaccine rollouts.
 
The video is backed up by this independent study of 14 countries showing the same pattern, see https://williambowles.info/2021/05/28/covid-19-vaccines-lead-to-new-infections-and-mortality-the-evidence-is-overwhelming/amp/.
 
Care homes throughout the UK reported outbreaks within days of vaccination taking place. These reports were quickly hushed up and have never been mentioned again. Criminality by cover-up, criminality by continuing to promote these dangerous vaccines. For details see https://principia-scientific.com/the-covid-establishment-has-been-getting-away-with-murder/

11
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RW
RW
3 years ago

If mass testing of healthy people had never been started, we wouldn’t still have to listen to witless Chris, stupid Susan, nagging Neal, pathetic Patrick and all the other hapless anti-heroes of the great Corona virus cult. Reportedly, there are about 900,000 LFTs available per day. This translates to a litte less that 900,000 hardcore Covidiots literally holding the nation hostage, twice and thrice vaccinated, dozens and dozens of times testing and retesting themselves and God only knows how often repeat-positive. None of these new cases are really new. They’ve all been positively involved with this before.

20
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MTF
MTF
3 years ago

 I would be very grateful if one of the experts could explain to me why we aren’t simply reclassifying the variant as a common cold rather than treating it as a deadly pandemic, if the major symptoms of Omicron are as described?

Well I am no expert but surely the answer is that although the initial symptoms and the symptoms for most people are very similar to a cold, unlike a cold, Covid occasionally progresses into something much more serious. Furthermore, there are now treatments which can substantially reduce the risk if Covid is diagnosed early.

1
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RW
RW
3 years ago
Reply to  MTF

That’s exactly like a common cold: Pneumonia is a possibly life-threatening complication, especially for frail or otherwise exhausted people, most of them being fairly old. Another vulnerable group would be young people with anorexia. I still remember titlepage photos of the first German victim of swine flu — a grossly underweight teenage girl.

16
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MTF
MTF
3 years ago
Reply to  RW

Fair enough. I guess it is a matter of how likely it is to progress. The current hospitalisation rate for Covid appears to be about 1 in 165, call it 1 in 250 to allow for those admitted for something else. I don’t think the hospitalisation rate for the common cold is anywhere close to this.

1
-4
Paul_Somerset
Paul_Somerset
3 years ago
Reply to  MTF

Eh? A cold is how a good chunk of the population traditionally dies. They’re in their 80s, weak, they catch a cold, they go into hospital, they contract pneumonia, and that’s it.

Edit: Or as RW says.

Last edited 3 years ago by Paul_Somerset
17
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Catee
Catee
3 years ago
Reply to  MTF

It has more to do with the EUA for the clot shots ending once there is no longer a ‘pandemic’. The fact they are now talking about 4 boosters a year means they’ve no intention of reclassifying it as ‘endemic’ any time soon.

10
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mishmash
mishmash
3 years ago
Reply to  MTF

How do people like you even manage to walk to the shops for milk without panicking yourself to death?

Last edited 3 years ago by mishmash
8
0
Spritof_GFawkes
Spritof_GFawkes
3 years ago

“the skills required to get elected in a democracy are quite different from the skills needed to govern well”. Love this, it’s spot on

9
0
Stuart
Stuart
3 years ago

It’s been uplifting to read the DS throughout the year. along with all your comments

However, I must go now and celebrate.

nil illegitimi carborundum

A happy new year to everyone and love to all!

13
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Iwan Hughes
Iwan Hughes
3 years ago

“Being something of an old-fashioned doctor, I would be very grateful if one of the experts could explain to me why we aren’t simply reclassifying the variant as a common cold rather than treating it as a deadly pandemic, if the major symptoms of Omicron are as described?”

As I understand it, what we know as the Common Cold is actually caused by types of coronavirus. So it really is a cold. Except that the powers that be are desperate to maintain a state of crisis, so testing positive for a cold consigns the patient to ten days’ confinement. Or maybe seven days plus two lateral flow tests. Except, remarkably, we’ve run out of lateral flow tests. I think the writer is encouraging us to gently disengage from the whole ghastly testing and tracing business. If so, I heartily agree.

17
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mishmash
mishmash
3 years ago

What about general admissions, any correlation with the 8% rise in mortality?

Last edited 3 years ago by mishmash
1
0
bowlsman
bowlsman
3 years ago

Nice report. But we still have miles to go to breakthrough full. Especially now that Whitty and co will be emboldened to push harder with their NY honours.
Arise Sir Lockdown.

0
0
Hester
Hester
3 years ago

I wonder if we had the figures for those hospitalised with Flu, pneumonia and other respiritory illness in the years prior to Covid, and then just used those in Hospital because of Covid not with it because they broke their leg and caught it in Hospital, what those figures would look like.
2022 Time to wake up, we have had 2 years of this now, it is very obvious this is not about a virus, this is about control and the removal of liberties such that a new world order, under the banner of build back better can be born, But to build back you first have to destroy, which is what they are in the process of doing, destroying our relationships, our families, our work, our economy, our health and education system and democracy. This cannot go on unless we want our children and their children to be slaves to those running the new world order. If we want this to end we must unite and disobey, take back control we are millions, they are thousands, time to send them back to the cess pit they emerged from,
2022 I say no to a new world order, you need to too.

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