Dear All
It has been awhile since I blogged, like many I am stuck at
home, I am climbing the walls wondering if the bad news from the coronavirus
will ever end. Today’s post is courtesy of my brother loaning me a device to
access the internet. Each day, we see the stats coming in, hundreds of people
right across the age range are dead, many more are infected and the brightest
story are from people who in the midst of this hell are doing their bit. People
like Captain Tom Moore who has become a symbol of hope for funding raising
millions of pounds for the NHS at such an elderly age. While people like Sam
Smith, the musician tell of the ‘hell’ of living in a big mansion and being
bored, contrast this with Captain Tom Moore, who applied himself and whose idea
of helping the NHS uplifted the nation.
Captain Tom Moore is a hero, and there are many more heroes
fighting this virus, the ones in hospital frontlines, and also others on the
front lines at Care Homes. They are up for the fight; they just want the protection
of PPE equipment to do their jobs. Staffs at Care Homes have left their own homes
to move into Care Homes to save their clients by limiting contact with the
outside world. They are giving up their family life to protect people from other
families, a rather selfless act in these desperate times.
Many elderly people in Care Homes are sadly not going to
make it, many NHS staff and patients are sadly not going to make it. How bad is
it, even University Medical students are graduating early before their course
ends, ‘straight out of uni and straight into the trenches’. This must tell you
something about how serious things have gotten, it is an un-usual step to say
the least regarding early graduation.
In many ways, I think people are being to wonder if we are
getting the extent of how truly bad this pandemic actually is. We get stats
ever day, the infected, the dead; the number in ICU, but we don’t have the stat
of how much of the population is infected, how these people are moving amongst
us and their patterns of movement. Although talk of an exit strategy is a news
item by press and politicians, we shouldn’t get our hopes raised up, because
this is the first wave of the pandemic. When Spanish Flu hit the world about
100 years ago, the first wave killed many, the second wave killed many more
people. I saw an interesting documentary about Spanish Flu and how it was
transported in troop ships which when it docked in Europe
spread through the armies fighting in World War One.
At present, we are told many people right across the world
are working flat out on a cure, a vaccine which will save us all. In the
meantime, there is no evidence to suggest people who have recovered from coronavirus then
have immunity; this is according to the World Health Organisation. Senior epidemiologists
at the WHO have warned that there is no proof those who have been infected
cannot be infected again, which if there was piece of news that you wouldn’t
want to hear, this is it. We hear that Coronavirus vaccine trials are about to
start, which means hundreds of people have to volunteer to be human guinea
pigs, medical trials regardless are always a step into the unknown which carry
risk. Risk the vaccine doesn’t work, and risk the vaccine doesn’t cause other
problems which circulating in the human body. In the news, we read that a
vaccine could be finished by mid-August. Many organisations are working on
their version of a vaccine and others are working to see if current drugs can
fight of coronavirus.
We live in hope.
The UK Government has been criticised for its approach to
the virus, but when you look at everyone else in Europe
and the rest of the world, this virus has left many countries flat footed. No
matter who controls a government, Putin in Russia, Trump in America, Macron in
France or Johnson in the UK, no one will be getting a pat on the back and a
hearty handshake of well done.
Too many people will have died, and a celebration will look
rather out of place.
People can talk about how we will all be wearing facemasks
in the future, how testing is the great panacea, about how much is spent on
testing kits, such as serology tests, which measure levels of antibodies in
blood plasma. But tested and not infected today, might not mean not infected
further down the line. Certain groups seem to be getting hard hit by the virus
such as the BAME, is it genetic factors or social factors which are the cause,
or a combination of both, we don’t know. Why is it some people get a slight flu
and others get a crushing health crisis which results in death?
Speaking at a press conference in Geneva , Dr Maria van Kerkhove said:
“There are a lot of countries that are suggesting using
rapid diagnostic serological tests to be able to capture what they think will
be a measure of immunity. Right now, we have no evidence that the use of a
serological test can show that an individual has immunity or is protected from
re-infection.”
She added:
“These antibody tests will be able to measure that level of
seroprevalence – that level of antibodies but that does not mean that somebody
with antibodies means that they are immune.”
To achieve herd immunity, it means people have to get
infected and then live, the downside side of the policy is death, Herd immunity
has been talked about right from the start of the pandemic, but what needs to
be talked about is the planning for how to deal with this type of crisis.
Basically everyone is making it up as they go along, because everyone was
caught unprepared and sadly a touch too slow to act. Shutting down a country
isn’t an easy decision because it is very complicated not just in terms of
health but also in terms of economics. We weren’t ready but then no one was,
this is something which countries must come together to recognise, viruses
recognise no borders.
We know that the lockdown is said to be three more weeks,
but I suspect that the ‘three more weeks’ mentality is to give people a mental
cushion. I would say if we still have hundreds dead each day, we can expect no
change approaching a similar timeline of China
who locked down Wuhan
for nearly three months. Given we have done circa three weeks so far, we should
realise that we are fighting a war, this period of fighting is deep war, defeat
fought off but no victory insight, a time of grim forbearance.
In day to day life, the people who get paid not a lot who
are not keeping our society going have come to the fore; they will get the
recognition now that they should have gotten before. No one who has worked on
the frontline of this crisis and sadly lost their lives should be forgotten. I
would like to see all their names on a wall of remembrance, we really are
fighting a war here; many more heroes will emerge and get recognition, and
hopefully come through this. One thing is certain, we were unprepared, we were
too slow to act, and we were too slow to ensure that as a country that our
logistics supply lines and supplies were in place. The UK Government will have
an inquiry into all that has happened, and the outcome must be the need to
create more robust plans for acting sooner.
Finally, everyone got caught out, and everyone got caught
out everywhere, which is why any celebration post coronavirus will feel rather
hollow! One plan which is needed at the end of the ‘war’ is a UK ‘Marshall Plan’. If you know your history this was all about rebuilding post war Europe, but
this time round, we need to do it for a post (coronavirus) war UK . The road back to normal is going to take a long time for those of us who survive and live through this. So far in the UK, 15,464 deaths recorded but that number is already being questioned as low due to lack of testing. We are living through the most trying of times and we can't afford to be careless about not following the rules or we may be added to that figure.
Yours sincerely
George Laird
The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow University
This virus is bringing back bad memories of when I got ill during that H1N1/Swine Flu Pandemic in May 2009. I got what I thought was a bad flu, went to bed and one week later I was in hospital with viral pneumonia. My family was under quarantine for 4 days and my partner wasn't allowed to visit me for 4 days. I was seriously ill and I remember waking up on a trolley bed in hospital with all the doctors/nurses wearing space suits and masks. What I don't like about this pandemic is the system is not giving us real statistics. What is the real death rate? what area's in Scotland are infected. It's all a mystery to me. I'll be glad when this is all over but it would be better if our government gave the public better statistics.
ReplyDeleteGreat Post George. Captain Tom is an inspiration to us all. But there are some who are claiming this is a unionist stunt. Guess where - correct, Wings. Added to that is a cartoon which is truly in bad taste. Ffs yes the politicians fucked up on ppe, but to use this pandemic as a reason for independence is scraping the barrel.
ReplyDeleteAs well as well deserved praise for health workers, let us not forget the retail, power, telecoms, banking and other workers without whom we'd be buggered.
For those like me stuck inside, remember by doing this you are making a positive contribution to the crisis.
Dear Anon
ReplyDeleteSo many people have stepped up to the plate to do their bit, and you are right, without them, we would all be buggered.
George
George, this is ot but I don't know who to contact and know its anonymous. Someone on Wings has posted a lot of drivel, but included a statement that politicians and the police were responsible for the Dunblane massacre. We really need to get the media into that website.
ReplyDeleteIt's a hell of a strain, George. Personally, since in China it lasted about 3 months, I suspect strongly that it'll last about the same. We're still in April, so it's way too early to say yet, but my gut tells me it'll be moving to lift the lock down by roundabout May time, possibly as late as June, but of course it's impossible to say for certain as we know too well.
ReplyDeleteHopefully there'll be some lessons learned from this, such as no more (or at least less) hostility to each other over different ideas for example.
apparently news coming from China 4 weeks ago, now France yesterday. Smokers only 8.5% of deaths from Covid 19. Looks like smokers more immune to this disease than non smokers. The health freaks will be freaking out.
ReplyDeleteDear Anon
ReplyDeleteNo one but Thomas Hamilton was responsible for Dunblane, and he was a fiend.
George