leighavfc Posted March 17, 2020 Share Posted March 17, 2020 (edited) 8 minutes ago, lapal_fan said: All companies *really* take care of their staff until said company needs something, then it'll bleed staff dry. It's no shock companies are being bellends now. Not all mate... were certainly not. And my brothers company have put him off on full pay until further notice as he is a massive risk. Edited March 17, 2020 by leighavfc Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stevo985 Posted March 17, 2020 VT Supporter Share Posted March 17, 2020 I'm worried about my girlfriend's dad. He's old(ish), he's got heart problems, he's got diabetes, so he's very vulnerable. Plus he works on a building site but is technically self employed so won't get any sick pay. So he won't isolate himself. And when he absolutely has to isolate himself he won't be able to afford it. I mean the guy is a massive word removed. But I'm still worried about him. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HanoiVillan Posted March 17, 2020 Share Posted March 17, 2020 16 minutes ago, choffer said: the little one's school . . . the teachers are revolting. Harsh, but I guess we do all have a renewed focus on hygiene these days. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
villa4europe Posted March 17, 2020 Share Posted March 17, 2020 4 minutes ago, Stevo985 said: I'm worried about my girlfriend's dad. He's old(ish), he's got heart problems, he's got diabetes, so he's very vulnerable. Plus he works on a building site but is technically self employed so won't get any sick pay. So he won't isolate himself. And when he absolutely has to isolate himself he won't be able to afford it. I mean the guy is a massive word removed. But I'm still worried about him. If he owns the company or is the main contract point tell him he can at least use force majeure to get out of delay damages Its going to hit the industry hard 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mjmooney Posted March 17, 2020 VT Supporter Share Posted March 17, 2020 12 minutes ago, leighavfc said: Agreed mate! Doesn't matter which party is in they would be getting a bashing from other groups who oppose them Not sure I quite agree with that though. I don't see Labour currently using this to bash the Tories, there seems to be more of a wartime-style cessation of hostilities. I'll give the Tories the benefit of the doubt, and assume they would do the same were the roles reversed. What I AM sure about however, is that however good or bad a Labour administration would be, they would be subjected to a shitstorm of attacks from the Mail, Express, etc. They're better off out of it, atm. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pas5898 Posted March 17, 2020 Share Posted March 17, 2020 Schools can't close yet. In fact closing the schools will only make the situation worse. Generally speaking: Schools close > Parents go to work > Grandparents look after the diseased little ones. Generally Speaking: Schools Close > Nurses have no one to look after their kids > We are down on critical NHS staff If / when the schools close, our in-laws will need to look after them (both 60s) because neither me or my partner can afford to live off sick pay. If you are in the fortunate position able to stay at home with the kids or both WFH then the government should advise that, and actively encourage those able to take the kids out of school. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stevo985 Posted March 17, 2020 VT Supporter Share Posted March 17, 2020 (edited) 4 minutes ago, mjmooney said: What I AM sure about however, is that however good or bad a Labour administration would be, they would be subjected to a shitstorm of attacks from the Mail, Express, etc. I've never agreed with something so much in my life. They'll rally round Johnson no matter how bad he's doing (and they probably should, to an extent, given the circumstances) They'd nail a Labour leader to the **** wall. Edited March 17, 2020 by Stevo985 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post mjmooney Posted March 17, 2020 VT Supporter Popular Post Share Posted March 17, 2020 Quote Back in December 2019, as healthcare professionals we begged and pleaded with the general public to please think about their vulnerable neighbours and family members who rely on the NHS. We begged and pleaded for the general public to put a stop to the total disrespect towards NHS staff and the expectation that we should just ‘put up with it’. We begged and pleaded for the general public to save our already overstretched NHS: the backbone of and the one thing that this country prides itself on. The General Public did not listen. It fell onto deaf ears. The reason we begged and pleaded was because we know this line of work better than anyone. Better than people who don’t rely on the NHS, better than politicians, even better than scientists. We knew as health care professionals that if anything drastic was to happen on top of our pressures all year round and severe pressures in the winter, that the NHS would not cope. We deal with this pandemonium 24/7, 365 days a year. Demand ALWAYS over rides capacity for us but no one cares, the general public never cared because ‘it doesn’t affect them’. My own friends and family said that to my face. You don’t care when we’re up to our ears in an outburst of CDiff, Flu or MRSA because the media doesn’t make it your business. We deal with infectious diseases constantly. Every single day. We still struggle to cope with these infections even though there are official and effective treatments for them. You care now because the media has made this your business. We are being scrutinised, questioned and observed under a microscope at the moment. Now can you imagine working for the NHS at present? In the middle of this chaos? Because it affects you now so please try to imagine. Can you imagine how it feels to have no choice but to go into work when the rest of the world is being told to barricade themselves at home? Can you imagine frontlining a pandemic where your governments national plan is to sing ‘happy birthday?’ along with the valuable advice from Jacob Rees-Mogg of ‘coughs and sneezes spread diseases?’ That’s what is terrifying. This virus is nasty. It’s wiping the elderly and people with comorbidities off their feet faster than you can blink. But what is even scarier, like we warned months ago, is that the NHS is not coping with this. We are trying our best but we are over run. We need total lockdown to slow the spreading of this virus, It may seem dramatic to those who simply do not understand. It most likely isn’t going to kill you if you are young and healthy. But people who are immunosuppressed, on chemotherapy, diabetic, neutropenic, asthmatic, COPD, emphysemic, lung CA, elderly and many, many more underlying illness are majorly struggling to fight off this virus. That is not a small portion of the general public. That is one hell of a lot of us. The same government who has screwed us over for the last 10 years now expect US to do them a favour. They expect our poor 3rd years students who they stripped the bursary from and have made pay £60K for their nursing degree to now graduate EARLY and frontline COVID on £22K a year. They expect our retired nurses who have worked until they’re almost 70 to come back and help frontline COVID. They expect us to work and work until we finally drop, whilst still taxing our overtime and bank shifts. They are solely relying on us because they do not know what to do. And we will do it. Because that’s who we are and that’s what we sign up for. We will fight and fight for our patients not even until we drop, if we drop we stand up and carry on fighting for them. Regardless of our physical and mental wellbeing. That’s the way it has always been not just because of some new virus. But hey ho, at least we’re finally out of the EU and are now a lone, single little island ready to conquer this virus! Oh wait... To my NHS colleagues across the country from Band 2 through to Band 8, I love you all so much . FB 7 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lapal_fan Posted March 17, 2020 Share Posted March 17, 2020 3 minutes ago, mjmooney said: FB I mean... That's just annoyingly emotive, and I didn't want Boris in no.10 (nor Corbyn tbh). It'll get a lot of likes though, which is the point of it. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
leighavfc Posted March 17, 2020 Share Posted March 17, 2020 (edited) 16 minutes ago, mjmooney said: Not sure I quite agree with that though. I don't see Labour currently using this to bash the Tories, there seems to be more of a wartime-style cessation of hostilities. I'll give the Tories the benefit of the doubt, and assume they would do the same were the roles reversed. What I AM sure about however, is that however good or bad a Labour administration would be, they would be subjected to a shitstorm of attacks from the Mail, Express, etc. They're better off out of it, atm. But that's what I mean it doesn't matter who is in their will be groups of people who will just point blank bash them for no logical reason other than they support the opposing. The media is glaring evidence of this. I wasnt on about the parties, as you say I dont see much bashing of the Tories from any of them currently.I meant the general public, literally some people will shoot the government down regardless... and that goes for whichever party is in. perhaps wasnt clear about this originally. Times like this are to see the logic in general and not our individual wants and needs. Edited March 17, 2020 by leighavfc Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mjmooney Posted March 17, 2020 VT Supporter Share Posted March 17, 2020 5 minutes ago, lapal_fan said: I mean... That's just annoyingly emotive, and I didn't want Boris in no.10 (nor Corbyn tbh). It'll get a lot of likes though, which is the point of it. Of course it's **** ing emotive! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post lapal_fan Posted March 17, 2020 Popular Post Share Posted March 17, 2020 9 minutes ago, mjmooney said: Of course it's **** ing emotive! There's emotive and "dramatic, look at my plight" emotive - I put that message in the latter. I work at Worcester Hospital - there is no panic, there is no turmoil, it's business as usual. Will things get worse? Probably. But for now, no one is running around, working 100 hour weeks, doing things they wouldn't normally do - any more so than usual. Same goes for my other sites, the Alex in Redditch, Kidderminster General & Whipps Cross in London. I know people who work on other hospital contracts like the Queen Alexandra in Portsmouth the QE in Bham, all of the hospitals down in Cornwall, Pinderfields in Yorkshire - lots of large, multi functional Trusts. I have daily calls with my equivalents who are working onsite or remotely - all is pretty calm. It's the same all over at the moment - there is no panic - this is being led by shitty media reporting and overly dramatic messages from people with social-media-dysfunction, like that message you posted. Yes, there are important messages which need to be listened to. Yes, we all need to be a bit more careful around the weak, elderly and vulnerable - we need to manage that risk - but we absolutely do not need to panic, treat any other person like they have a terrible disease - we just need to give each other more space and become more hygienic - manage the risk per individual. My 10 month old and 5 year old aren't worried about it, they're more likely to spread infection, so you reign them in - I'm not taking them to see great grandparents on Sunday, but I'll be taking them to the park to play outside in the open with other kids. If I see my granddad (88), I'll sit away from him, across the room. Wash my hands before I see him and if I need to cough, sneeze etc, go to the toilet to do so, wash again and go back. If I have to have him in the car, I'll make him sit in the back, so all my lovely mouth juice hits my windscreen, not his face when I'm talking to him - just simple things that can severely limit any risk of infection. It's all about being sensible. 8 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheMelvillan Posted March 17, 2020 Share Posted March 17, 2020 Very quick, genuine question guys. Are people who are panic buying/ hoarding/ stocking up doing so because a) they think the shops are going to run out of food and not restock in the long run or b) in order to be able to stay at home and not interract with people going forward? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
choffer Posted March 17, 2020 VT Supporter Share Posted March 17, 2020 1 minute ago, TheMelvillan said: Very quick, genuine question guys. Are people who are panic buying/ hoarding/ stocking up doing so because a) they think the shops are going to run out of food and not restock in the long run or b) in order to be able to stay at home and not interract with people going forward? I don't think it's that easy for it to be one or the other. I went shopping on Sunday and was amazed at what people were filling (cramming) their trolleys with. I'd gone in just to get my usual weekly shop but ended up getting way more than I usually would, having seen how others were shopping. Maybe I'm just a suggestible sheep but within five minutes of being in the supermarket, I'd realised that I needed to have more than a weeks worth of food. I didn't bulk buy, I didn't need bog roll but I realised I might need to prepare for a few weeks as I'd no idea what the future would hold. I think I'm probably good for 2 weeks in total. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
snowychap Posted March 17, 2020 Share Posted March 17, 2020 (edited) 15 minutes ago, lapal_fan said: If I have to have him in the car, I'll make him sit in the back, so all my lovely mouth juice hits my windscreen, not his face when I'm talking to him - just simple things that can severely limit any risk of infection. CNBC: Quote World health officials say the respiratory disease spreads through human-to-human contact, droplets carried through sneezing and coughing as well as germs left on inanimate objects. The coronavirus can go airborne, staying suspended in the air depending on factors such as heat and humidity, they said. This is not to try to worry you or to pick out one thing but it seems like some of the information that you were given in your meeting doesn't necessarily tie in with some of the things being said by other authorities, such as the WHO here and Chris Whitty's comments about pregnant women, which was something along the lines that they were advising them in the same way as the old or at risk groups (because they were not sure about the risk of passing it on to the unborn) Edited March 17, 2020 by snowychap 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
brommy Posted March 17, 2020 Share Posted March 17, 2020 10 minutes ago, TheMelvillan said: Very quick, genuine question guys. Are people who are panic buying/ hoarding/ stocking up doing so because a) they think the shops are going to run out of food and not restock in the long run or b) in order to be able to stay at home and not interract with people going forward? I suspect varying degrees of both. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mjmooney Posted March 17, 2020 VT Supporter Share Posted March 17, 2020 4 minutes ago, choffer said: I don't think it's that easy for it to be one or the other. I went shopping on Sunday and was amazed at what people were filling (cramming) their trolleys with. I'd gone in just to get my usual weekly shop but ended up getting way more than I usually would, having seen how others were shopping. Maybe I'm just a suggestible sheep but within five minutes of being in the supermarket, I'd realised that I needed to have more than a weeks worth of food. I didn't bulk buy, I didn't need bog roll but I realised I might need to prepare for a few weeks as I'd no idea what the future would hold. I think I'm probably good for 2 weeks in total. And there's another factor. We are being exhorted to look after our elderly neighbours and the self-isolating by shopping for them. So the supermarkets will have customers who may be buying stuff for several people, and being looked at askance by others who think they are hoarding. Plus people who really ARE hoarding, but pretending they are buying for their neighbours. Atmosphere of paranoia and suspicion. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lapal_fan Posted March 17, 2020 Share Posted March 17, 2020 1 minute ago, snowychap said: CNBC: This is not to overly worry you or to pick out one thing but it seems like some of the information that you were given in your meeting doesn't necessarily tie in with some of the things being said by other authorities, such as the WHO here and Chris Whitty's comments about pregnant women, which was something along the lines that they were advising them in the same way as the old or at risk groups (because they were not sure about the risk of passing it on to the unborn) I think we need to be careful here about what "airborne" means. I was told that the virus cannot be passed on through skin. That is to say, someone with the virus touches another person (skin to skin), but the infected person has clean, none contaminated hands means it won't spread. Airborne is water droplets. The famous letter is "F" or "Th" sounds - they project spit, but unless that spit lands in the mouth, eyes or nose of a non-infected person, they won't get it (hence my "sit in the back of the car" comment) We do know that if an infected person coughs into their hands, thus contaminating their hand, then touches a mental handle (for example), this strain of virus can remain alive for 12 hours - that's an unusually long time for a virus to stay alive, and it's because it remains alive out of a host for a longer period, that it's particularly more infective, hence why we need to be more careful. *I might have another meeting today with Infection control* So if anyone has any questions they'd like me to ask, then quote me and I'll try and get an answer for you - hopefully this can help spread good information. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kingman Posted March 17, 2020 Share Posted March 17, 2020 6 minutes ago, TheMelvillan said: Very quick, genuine question guys. Are people who are panic buying/ hoarding/ stocking up doing so because a) they think the shops are going to run out of food and not restock in the long run or b) in order to be able to stay at home and not interract with people going forward? My reason is to minimise the risk of contact and infection, I tick 3 boxes on latest legislation to self isolate whilst my elderly father ticks all but 2 so we get one chance at this and one only. Ive been anticipating this since the New year and been following it closely since the end of Jan when they locked down Wuhan. Wouldn't say i've panic bought as just added couple items on each trip over the months and now have a little stash meaning we don't have to go out and be exposed to the risks and inadvertently pass on the infection. In the process of setting up Tesco account so any additional items required i will have delivered for the family. Good luck 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dante_Lockhart Posted March 17, 2020 Share Posted March 17, 2020 2 minutes ago, lapal_fan said: I think we need to be careful here about what "airborne" means. I was told that the virus cannot be passed on through skin. That is to say, someone with the virus touches another person (skin to skin), but the infected person has clean, none contaminated hands means it won't spread. Airborne is water droplets. The famous letter is "F" or "Th" sounds - they project spit, but unless that spit lands in the mouth, eyes or nose of a non-infected person, they won't get it (hence my "sit in the back of the car" comment) We do know that if an infected person coughs into their hands, thus contaminating their hand, then touches a mental handle (for example), this strain of virus can remain alive for 12 hours - that's an unusually long time for a virus to stay alive, and it's because it remains alive out of a host for a longer period, that it's particularly more infective, hence why we need to be more careful. *I might have another meeting today with Infection control* So if anyone has any questions they'd like me to ask, then quote me and I'll try and get an answer for you - hopefully this can help spread good information. I wish more people in control of spreading the information were more like you. Concise, informative, not scare-mongering. Everyone who reads social media is in a frenzy right now because Joe from Quarry Bank said we're all going to die unless we stay inside and shut the country down. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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