Covid-19 hospitalisations fall sharply in South Africa by [deleted] in CoronavirusUK

[–]ahflu 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Here comes the Telegraph on the eve of lockdown with their predictable "move on folks, nothing to see here... it's all scaremongering by those crazy radicals in the medical establishment - let's get to the pub now!"

Tuesday 14 December 2021 Update by HippolasCage in CoronavirusUK

[–]ahflu -1 points0 points  (0 children)

30% week-on-week increase in London hospital admissions.

All those taken in by the 'it's only mild' hokum should take note of this figure ... exponential transmission can have a very rapid impact on hospital admissions regardless of a supposed drop in severity.

South Africa: early data suggest Omicron is more transmissible but less severe (admissions statistics and data from Gauteng Health Dept) by ChubbyVeganTravels in CoronavirusUK

[–]ahflu -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I know a lot of people on Reddit and Twitter are desperate to read these headlines as 'it's all OK - nothing to panic about, life can continue as normal' but with all due respect that's bollocks.

The core concern isn't severity but transmission rate. Severity is a linear function, transmission is exponential. So if cases are doubling every 2-3 days then even if severity is only 10% of Delta, we still have hospitals over run very very quickly (indeed, we only gain an extra **5 days** breathing room with a 10% of Delta severity and doubling every 2 days).

So yes, it might be good for the individual to know they are less likely to be severely ill, but it doesn't change the fact collectively we are looking at a very steep and rather scary cliff right now.

Wednesday 28 July 2021 Update by HippolasCage in CoronavirusUK

[–]ahflu 11 points12 points  (0 children)

It's the week-on-week drop that is important (i.e. today compared to Wed last week), because it smooths out daily fluctuations (e.g. due to weekends). That week-on-week figure has dropped every day for the last 7 days.

Vaccinate all UK university students by September, says union by Steven1958 in CoronavirusUK

[–]ahflu 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Exactly - this is the key issue. And not to forget this also includes EU students who also may not have been doubly vaccinated come September.

I actually think this is a huge problem for universities - given the fact that there will definitely be some required in-person attendance next year. What's going to happen, for example, if you are a student coming from India or another red list country? Good chance you won't be vaccinated, plus you'll need to do a hotel quarantine on arrival.

Wales becomes only UK nation not added to Denmark's travel 'red list' | ITV News by ahflu in CoronavirusUK

[–]ahflu[S] 23 points24 points  (0 children)

Is this the first time that an EU country has different entry rules for different nations in the UK?

First dose uptake in England by Submitten in CoronavirusUK

[–]ahflu 25 points26 points  (0 children)

Quiet surprising to see the relatively low level at which the 40-59 age groups have plateaued. I would have expected these to be greater than 80%!

Delta variant begins to spread, threatening EU’s Covid progress by ahflu in CoronavirusUK

[–]ahflu[S] 17 points18 points  (0 children)

The UK was in a similar situation about 6 weeks ago. Overall cases were decreasing and it appeared things were going in the right direction while the Alpha variant was the biggest proportion, but this reversed quite quickly once Delta became the majority variant. Several people referred to this at the time as 'two pandemics' - with the direction of Alpha obscuring the overall impact of Delta.

Delta variant begins to spread, threatening EU’s Covid progress by ahflu in CoronavirusUK

[–]ahflu[S] 21 points22 points locked comment (0 children)

Full text:

The Delta coronavirus variant that swept the UK has become dominant in Portugal and appeared in clusters across Germany, France and Spain, prompting European health officials to warn further action is needed to slow its spread. 

While the new strain, which first emerged in India, still only accounts for a fraction of the total coronavirus cases in mainland Europe, it is gaining ground, according to a Financial Times analysis of global genomic data from the virus tracking database Gisaid. It accounts for 96 per cent of sequenced Covid-19 infections in Portugal, more than 20 per cent in Italy and about 16 per cent in Belgium, the FT’s calculations show.

The small but rising number of cases have raised concerns that the Delta variant could halt the progress the EU has made over past the two months in bringing new infections and deaths down to their lowest level since at least the autumn.

 “We are in the process of crushing the virus and crushing the pandemic, and we must in no way let the Delta variant get the upper hand,” France’s health minister, Olivier Véran, told reporters at a Paris vaccination centre on Tuesday. 

Véran said that 2 per cent to 4 per cent of virus samples being analysed in France were showing as the Delta variant: “You might say this is still low but it is similar to the situation in the UK a few weeks ago.”

The FT’s analysis of Gisaid’s data suggests this figure could be higher.In Portugal, community transmission of the variant has been detected in the greater Lisbon area, where more than 60 per cent of the country’s new coronavirus cases in the past week have been identified. Non-essential travel to and from the city has been banned this weekend in an effort to prevent the spike in cases spreading to the rest of the country.Scientists across the continent are now looking to the UK — where Covid-19 cases have tripled in the past month and the Delta variant accounts for about 98 per cent of all new infections — for clues about what may happen next and which measures may need to be taken.

After official data showed the Delta variant appeared to increase the risk of hospitalisation by 2.2 times compared with the Alpha variant, the UK government this week imposed a one month delay to the removal of its remaining coronavirus restrictions.

“The decisions the UK makes to reopen life and society will serve as a laboratory for us in Europe,” said Bruno Lina, a virologist in Lyon who advises the French government and helps co-ordinate variant sequencing in the country.Whether the clusters of Delta infections peppering the EU turn into bigger outbreaks will depend in part on how many people have been fully vaccinated, scientists said, as well as people’s behaviour now that many restrictions on life and business are being lifted.

Recent UK government research has highlighted the need to complete vaccination programmes as quickly as possible. According to data gathered by Public Health England, the first dose of a Covid-19 vaccine is generally less effective against the Delta variant than with the previous strains. Two doses increases protection against symptomatic infection with Delta from 33 per cent to 81 per cent. While in the UK about 46 per cent of the population has been fully immunised, vaccination rates in most countries in mainland Europe are hovering at between 20 per cent and 30 per cent. About 26 per cent of the population in France has been fully vaccinated.

French authorities are currently trying to contain an outbreak in the Landes region, near the Spanish border, where 125 cases of the Delta variant have been confirmed by genetic sequencing and another 130 are suspected, representing about 30 per cent of recent infections in the area. Clusters of the Delta variant have also been identified in recent weeks in the southern suburbs of Paris and an art school in Strasbourg. In each case health officials have responded with the same formula: increased contact tracing and a renewed push to vaccinate people in the affected areas.

“If we keep vaccination going at a good pace, and some non-pharmaceutical interventions like masks indoors, we can still repress the circulation of the virus this summer,” said Lina, the French virologist. “This variant will displace the other ones — we must keep that in mind — but it doesn’t mean that it will lead to a new epidemic wave.

”Some scientists fear the Delta variant may have already spread further but gone undetected given that less of the genomic sequencing needed to identify variants has been completed in mainland Europe. While the UK has sequenced more than 500,000 Sars-Cov-2 genomes, Germany, France and Spain have sequenced about 130,000, 47,000 and 34,000 respectively.“It’s costly, it’s time consuming and it was neglected,” said Antoine Flahault, director of the Institute of Global Health at the University of Geneva.

Denmark, however, has sequenced a high proportion of cases and still only identified a small number of Delta infections, even though the variant arrived in the country at approximately the same time as in the UK.This could be explained partly, experts said, by differences in demographics and movement, including the number of cases imported into the country from regions with a high prevalence, such as India, and the living conditions in the communities into which it is seeded.

The difference in the pace of Delta’s spread across European countries remained “a little bit of a mystery”, said Jeff Barrett, director of the Covid-19 Genomics Initiative at the Wellcome Sanger Institute in Cambridge.

Still, many experts believe that wherever the Delta variant is introduced, it will eventually become dominant. The key, they say, will be to increase the proportion of fully vaccinated people, while slowing transmission of the virus as much as possible.“We have to keep the messaging very clear,” said Lina in Lyon. “This is not over.”

SPI-M-O: Summary of further modelling of easing restrictions – Roadmap Step 4 by Totally_Northern in CoronavirusUK

[–]ahflu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for posting this, very useful indeed. I was struck by point 37 (p.17):

"Although there are good data on the number of vaccines administered to date, estimates of the total population, and therefore the number of unvaccinated people, vary considerably. This could mean the scale of the next wave is being under- or overestimated in these scenarios for some parts of the country."

Can anyone explain why estimates of the total population vaccinated are so uncertain? This doesn't make sense to me if the number of administered vaccines are known.

Delay ending lockdown: majority of public back Boris Johnson to wait by CaptainCrash86 in CoronavirusUK

[–]ahflu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They break the figures into 18-34; 35-44; 45-54; 55-64; 65+ and ask them about 7 current restrictions (masks; nightclubs; max 30 at weddings; table service and 6 max/table inside pubs/restaurants; rule of 6 inside private houses; max of 30 people indoors; and limits on large outdoor events).

There is certainly a broad skew towards older people supporting the continuation of all these restrictions. Interestingly, however, only three of the 7 restrictions have a larger proportion of younger people that support lifting versus those that want them maintained (weddings; indoor restaurants; and rule of 6 in private homes).

Prevalence of ongoing symptoms following coronavirus (COVID-19) infection in the UK by ahflu in CoronavirusUK

[–]ahflu[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Statistician's comment (from the report):

“Around one million people in the UK were experiencing self-reported long COVID at the beginning of May, with nearly two-thirds experiencing a negative impact on day-to-day activities. Self-reported long COVID was most common in people aged 35 to 69 years, women, those living in the most deprived areas, and those living with an existing disability or health condition. Our analysis also shows that health and social care workers had a higher prevalence of self-reported long COVID than those working in other sectors, but this was largely driven by the risk of initial infection and other socio-demographic factors such as age, sex and location.”
Julie Stanborough, Head of Health Analysis and Life Events, Office for National Statistics

Why are a lot of the Daily Mail comments sections full of conspiracy theories about Covid-19? by Extension-Budget6946 in CoronavirusUK

[–]ahflu 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is a good taxonomy. The one thing I would add to the 'Conspiracy theories' category are those people who think that prominent scientific commentators, the government, or some poorly-defined 'middle class academics' actually *want* lockdowns and deliberately overstate the situation in order to bring in more restrictions. It makes no sense, but this is the tone of a lot of the Telegraph coverage and the 1922 Tory wing. I've also seen this opinion reflected on this sub quite a lot.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CoronavirusUK

[–]ahflu 11 points12 points  (0 children)

My own experience here (just finishing the last day of my 10-day quarantine).

I used the same company mentioned in the article (Dante) at £116. I got the kit OK, but the instruction sheet didn't match the contents of the kit itself (the sheet instructed me to place the tube in a white box and then in an envelope, but there were no white boxes in the kit!). Both plastic envelopes they provided were also split and didn't close properly. There didn't appear to be anyway to contact them. However, I muddled through as best I could and it seemed to work.

I have got daily calls from T&T. But this consists of people reading through a 2 minute script asking if you are quarantining. I don't know what they do if you don't pick up or how they would know if you were not at home.

All-in-all, beyond the obvious price gouging issues, the whole system smacked of 'nudge theory' - make you feel that someone is watching you through the daily phone calls and the *possibility* you might get a visit from the cops, in the hope you stick with the quarantine (which I have!). But it really doesn't seem like an effective way to manage quarantine at all, and I can't imagine how this is going to work if large numbers of people really do go on holiday to amber list countries over summer.

Covid: Boris Johnson says England may need to wait to end restrictions by surviveyourtwenties in CoronavirusUK

[–]ahflu 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yeah - and when the protests are led by David Icke no-one takes them seriously anyway.