Lack of confidence, to put it mildly, has been expressed about the Cummings/Johnson administration - exactly my problem, but they have the levers of power. All we can do is play our part in our communities and protect ourselves and those within our sphere of influence. If you haven't been listening to (the right parts of) the Today programme (Radio 4):
Recurrance
Listening at 9 minutes past 8 this morning - the academic for this model (below - Lancet) - potential for an even higher infectivity and mortality than in the Spring past, after schools open in September:
"Determining the optimal strategy for reopening schools, the impact of test and trace interventions, and the risk of occurrence of a second COVID-19 epidemic wave in the UK: a modelling study"
Followed immediately by that eminently sensible and straight talking Dr David Nabarro (WHO) saying its going to be anything but easy and we really must adapt/change our behaviours to get through this.
Local public health - Liverpool, for example.
Effective local action on supressing the infection has to be the way forward. More impressive than many a Cummings/Johnson administration announcement or initiative (let alone achivement) - action in Liverpool. A contribution yesterday (3 August) on Today (Radio 4) - impressive public health action in a specific ward in Liverpool where half of the city's cases were located.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m000ldd2 - (from 1 hour 51 mins).
Starts with a vox pop including some of the "they're just using this to control us, its not a mortal infection" faction (probably also anti vax, anti 5G, follows David Icke) to more informed and responsible reactions. Then they have Dr Matthew Ashton director Public Health for Sefton Council (Liverpool) outlining the effective steps taken - an intensive presence on the ground in that ward, informing, encouraging testing, explaining quarantining.
Most telling:
"Trust is main issue… we just don't have trust in a national system for people to believe in what we need to do……. much more likely to succeed if we use local community/faith leaders and volunteers who understand living and working in the area and get the message across - door to door - even the tough messages about testing and isolating….."
Also- the problem appears to originate with young people coming into multi-generational households, and the reason for resistance to testing and isolation - if there is no means of financial support when working is ruled out.
But Dr Ashton said - overall the response has been phenomenal.
Recurrance
Listening at 9 minutes past 8 this morning - the academic for this model (below - Lancet) - potential for an even higher infectivity and mortality than in the Spring past, after schools open in September:
"Determining the optimal strategy for reopening schools, the impact of test and trace interventions, and the risk of occurrence of a second COVID-19 epidemic wave in the UK: a modelling study"
Followed immediately by that eminently sensible and straight talking Dr David Nabarro (WHO) saying its going to be anything but easy and we really must adapt/change our behaviours to get through this.
Local public health - Liverpool, for example.
Effective local action on supressing the infection has to be the way forward. More impressive than many a Cummings/Johnson administration announcement or initiative (let alone achivement) - action in Liverpool. A contribution yesterday (3 August) on Today (Radio 4) - impressive public health action in a specific ward in Liverpool where half of the city's cases were located.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m000ldd2 - (from 1 hour 51 mins).
Starts with a vox pop including some of the "they're just using this to control us, its not a mortal infection" faction (probably also anti vax, anti 5G, follows David Icke) to more informed and responsible reactions. Then they have Dr Matthew Ashton director Public Health for Sefton Council (Liverpool) outlining the effective steps taken - an intensive presence on the ground in that ward, informing, encouraging testing, explaining quarantining.
Most telling:
"Trust is main issue… we just don't have trust in a national system for people to believe in what we need to do……. much more likely to succeed if we use local community/faith leaders and volunteers who understand living and working in the area and get the message across - door to door - even the tough messages about testing and isolating….."
Also- the problem appears to originate with young people coming into multi-generational households, and the reason for resistance to testing and isolation - if there is no means of financial support when working is ruled out.
But Dr Ashton said - overall the response has been phenomenal.
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