General Coronavirus chit chat thread - non-travel specific

I haven’t really said a lot online about what life has been like at the frontline since Covid-19 became front and centre of my work.
Turns out I didn’t need to, this writer says it all.
Racing Against The Virus New York Times

I am hugely grateful for what the Australian people have been able to do so far.
 
I'm not hopeful about increased productivity. My pet peeve is a pre-meeting meeting. Had one of these recently, got called 'I notice we're meeting next week, can we have 30 minutes to talk about what we're going to cover'... :rolleyes:

What about the post meeting meeting to discuss what should be put in the minutes and what action points should have been given out but weren't. ;)
 
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I am hugely grateful for what the Australian people have been able to do so far…...

… and we are all hugely grateful that so very few of us have needed your services.. but.. we are now in purgatory
The whole world is "unclean" and we are not.
How can we participate/share in such a world ?
 
I am hugely grateful for what the Australian people have been able to do so far…...

… and we are all hugely grateful that so very few of us have needed your services.. but.. we are now in purgatory
The whole world is "unclean" and we are not.
How can we participate/share in such a world ?
The whole world is not unclean. There are quite a few countries who are in a similar position to us.
I don’t pretend to have any knowledge as to how we navigate our way back into participation/ travel. I think without the measures that were taken we would have suffered unacceptable health outcomes and still be faced with huge consequences for travel worldwide.
 
I am hugely grateful for what the Australian people have been able to do so far…...

… and we are all hugely grateful that so very few of us have needed your services.. but.. we are now in purgatory
The whole world is "unclean" and we are not.
How can we participate/share in such a world ?

The corollary to that is for example if Trump or Bolsonaro was president of AU, what country would be comfortable having Aussies travelling there and who would want to fly here.
 
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So, in SA you are not currently trusted with alcohol in a restaurant. 😕.

We are talking about up to 10 seated diners in a restaurant/cafe aren’t we?

.... I will propose a toast to all of those in SA who are not able to do likewise.

Update: Chose a nice riesling from the Eden Valley 🙂 for the toast, earlier tonight, while dining indoors at a local Brisbane restaurant.

10 diners, tables well spaced, an enjoyable evening after about 2 months of not eating out, with no anti-social (drunken) behaviour to be seen. 🙂

Edit: Fellow diners knew how to comply with distancing
 
What about the post meeting meeting to discuss what should be put in the minutes and what action points should have been given out but weren't. ;)

Story of my life. I'm sure there are a series of Dilbert cartoons that capture all this to a T.
 
Interesting reading some reports on pandemics. The "Spanish flu" is often quoted as the worse pandemic in living memory. While exact counts are not available due to poor record keeping, poor communications and "figure fudging" across the world, I have seen a figure quoted that approx 675,000 died in the USA over approx 18 months which is thought to be "a reasonable approximation".

That pandemic occurred at a time of poor hygiene, poor communications, poverty, lack of today's knowledge of the pathways of disease, lack of medical facilities, less education, etc.The pandemic lasted more than 18 months so although obviously deaths by month wasn't a straight line, a rough average of 37,000 died per month over the 18 months.

Since 16th March (two months), more than 88,000 have died in the USA. 44,000 per month and they are opening up the country again and many examples of no social distancing, militancy, etc. 😳

In addition, over the term of the 18 months of the Spanish Flu, approx 3% of the US population in total contracted the disease.

Currently the "known" figure for the US infected after 2 months is 3.28% and climbing.

Edit: ( % of population)

In 1918 AU was very severely hit, way beyond what I imagined.

1918​
2020​
(so far)
InfectedDiedInfectedDied
AU40%3%0.0275%0.000392%
US3%0.64%3.28%0.268%
 
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based on todays announcement for VIC,
now im trying to find out exactly how long we have been in lockdown for and hte different stages,
but I can t for the life find it

anyone know where i can find a timeline ?
 
I haven’t really said a lot online about what life has been like at the frontline since Covid-19 became front and centre of my work.
Turns out I didn’t need to, this writer says it all.
Racing Against The Virus New York Times

I am hugely grateful for what the Australian people have been able to do so far.


Thanks for sharing, my daughter had had a similar experience in her ward, before being hit by a surge of a different kind though still caused by actions taken to manage Covid 19.

Initially the mad flurry and getting ready for a Covid 19 and the worry of of what may occur.

The reality of the first Covid 19 patients arriving in the ward for treatment and the special precautions that then had to be taken. Including cutting off all close contact with family and friends for fear of infecting them.

Then the combination Covid 19 cases plummeting in Australia with the large wave never arriving , and things become quieter.

Then the hospital restructured with a dedicated Covid 19 Ward, so that Covid 19 became rare in her ward. But with the restructure her ward took over the acute General Medicine patients many of whom require higher staff ratios but they do not have the extra staff, are high demand, have various psychological problems, are aggressive and even violent all with her ward not having the staff trained and experienced in the management and care of such patients. So she is now busier than she has ever been, more tired, stress levels are high, and physical assaults on staff are occurring.

She is looking forward to her ward eventually resuming normal workloads and cases.
 
So Sweden now has the highest per capita death rate in the world from COVID-19. In recent days it has overtaken Belgium, Italy and the UK.
FT Sweden

Bit early in the pandemic to know how this will all work out but I can’t see any country wanting to be at the top of this table at any stage of it.
 
So Sweden now has the highest per capita death rate in the world from COVID-19. In recent days it has overtaken Belgium, Italy and the UK.
FT Sweden

Bit early in the pandemic to know how this will all work out but I can’t see any country wanting to be at the top of this table at any stage of it.

Similar story in the Oz, sourced from The Times:

Coronavirus: Sweden out in the cold with Europe’s highest death rate

Note they are only talking about the rate in the past few days, not the overall rate, where they lie about 6th in Europe. Its affecting a proposed Nordic 'bubble' for travel. Yeah, why should places like Denmark and Norway go through the pain of lock-down, only to have the Swedes stroll in 'sneezing' over everybody?

EDIT: Sorry, I see the FT is using coughulative figures. I was looking at this site, but looking closer, it hasn't updated recent fatalities.

 
Similar story in the Oz, sourced from The Times:

Coronavirus: Sweden out in the cold with Europe’s highest death rate

Note they are only talking about the rate in the past few days, not the overall rate, where they lie about 6th in Europe. Its affecting a proposed Nordic 'bubble' for travel. Yeah, why should places like Denmark and Norway go through the pain of lock-down, only to have the Swedes stroll in 'sneezing' over everybody?

EDIT: Sorry, I see the FT is using coughulative figures. I was looking at this site, but looking closer, it hasn't updated recent fatalities.

A bit OT but all of the links from The Australian are behind a pay wall.
They (and The Telegraph in the UK) are amongst the few newspapers not to offer free access to COVID-19 coverage.
 

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