SammmeBee
Journeyman Pro
No isolation at all would be far better and we could just all go about our lives as we choose for ourselves…..
This is indeed good news. Fingers crossed it continues once the effects of Xmas mixing is added to the numbers.
I think it's definitely time for the number of cases to be downgraded in terms of importance in the figures. Yes, they will affect workplaces with people isolating but don't seem to be correlating to hospitalisations and deaths.
As an example the rolling 7 day average for total cases in the UK is 872.5 per 100k population, in Germany it is 306.3 and in France 551.9. The rolling 7 day average for deaths in those countries is UK - 84.4, Germany - 238 and France - 177.4. We are testing far more than other countries so will be finding more cases but fortunately those cases do not seem to be leading to deaths. We have similar vaccine rollout success as the other two countries but are seeing far fewer deaths.
Over the last 7 days Germany have had almost three times as many deaths as UK and France twice as many. Is there any logical reason for this with Omicron being milder than previous versions? Is it just because Germany and France did better at the start of the pandemic in protecting the vulnerable and therefore have more in that category alive now who are being seriously affected, whereas we had very high numbers at the start and therefore have fewer vulnerable people now to get badly affected? In the early stages our numbers of deaths was horrendous compared to most other countries in Europe (bar probably Italy) but now others such as France and Germany are, unfortunately, catching up.


For the people who have used loads of LFTs, something to do
Any chance you could make me a pub, gonna be next year before I see one ?
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Stay positive but be negative.....if you see what I mean.....
USA have cut the isolation ti e down to 5 days and many are calling for it here...
Surely 5 days isn't enough....Tashy is an example.
Possibly good news - and it's likely confirmation - 'broadcast' some time ago - that Omicron will (percentage-wise) require fewer hospitalisations - thus less strain on NHS resources. But I'm not entirely convinced that excluding 'incidental' covid is fully valid. I'd be pretty certain that 'having' Covid likely contributed to why some/many had to be admitted!This is encouraging. We are not seeing a massive jump in hospitalisations due to omicron that some experts expected. Of the 6245 beds occupied by covid patients on 21 Dec, nearly 30% are "incidental" covid - ie they are in for something else but tested positive. The total 6245 was only up by 259 the previosus week and only 45 of this increase (circa 20%) were admitted because of covid.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/20...hould-treated-caution-many-patients-admitted/
Except for those 'we' infect who do require hospitalisation - which will likely be considerably more than now. Nothing wrong with attempting to get to 'herd immunity', but over time, not 'instantaneously' with consequences for infrastructure.No isolation at all would be far better and we could just all go about our lives as we choose for ourselves…..
Where are you getting those numbers from? Only a couple bear any resemblence to the numbers on this chart - even having for converting from Weekly to Daily!This is indeed good news. Fingers crossed it continues once the effects of Xmas mixing is added to the numbers.
I think it's definitely time for the number of cases to be downgraded in terms of importance in the figures. Yes, they will affect workplaces with people isolating but don't seem to be correlating to hospitalisations and deaths.
As an example the rolling 7 day average for total cases in the UK is 872.5 per 100k population, in Germany it is 306.3 and in France 551.9. The rolling 7 day average for deaths in those countries is UK - 84.4, Germany - 238 and France - 177.4. We are testing far more than other countries so will be finding more cases but fortunately those cases do not seem to be leading to deaths. We have similar vaccine rollout success as the other two countries but are seeing far fewer deaths.
Where are you getting those
Over the last 7 days Germany have had almost three times as many deaths as UK and France twice as many. Is there any logical reason for this with Omicron being milder than previous versions? Is it just because Germany and France did better at the start of the pandemic in protecting the vulnerable and therefore have more in that category alive now who are being seriously affected, whereas we had very high numbers at the start and therefore have fewer vulnerable people now to get badly affected? In the early stages our numbers of deaths was horrendous compared to most other countries in Europe (bar probably Italy) but now others such as France and Germany are, unfortunately, catching up.
Where are you getting those numbers from? Only a couple bear any resemblence to the numbers on this chart https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/weekly-trends/#weekly_table
As for causes of differences, I suspect the percentages of Omicron vs Delta are the differences between the countries numbers. If you look at the %change columns (over previous 7 days), you'll see UK cases increase, but deaths decrease; Spain cases double but Deaths almost static. France (and Italy) similar but less pronounced. Germany Cases and Deaths reduced almost equally (legislation?).
So, to me, it's likely that the prevalence of Omicron is at 'a different point in the curve' with UK being ahead of Spain ahead of France and Italy and German yet to be affected by Omicron surge.
H'mm. Getting data from different sources is fraught with potential/possible 'accuracy' issues!This one for the case rates.....
https://www.statista.com/statistics...ates-in-the-past-7-days-in-europe-by-country/
And this one for the deaths....
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/daily-covid-deaths-7-day
H'mm. Getting data from different sources is fraught with potential/possible 'accuracy' issues!
The Worldometers one I refered to above has all the numbers (and charts) in a single place and has more than enough flexibility (except, perhaps, only 2 days Daily history) to use as a single ref.

Case rates haven't been the 'stat of most concern' for quite some time.Case rates beat their daily rate record by 50% and this thread doesn’t light up like a Christmas Tree?
mmmmmmmmm………………….
Obviously not.Bunch of anti-vaxxers attacked a vaccination centre in Milton Keynes, and stole stuff. Words fail me.
Bunch of anti-vaxxers attacked a vaccination centre in Milton Keynes, and stole stuff. Words fail me.
Did you tests start to fade away or was is strong line one day and gone the next?Day 8 and a negative test. Tomorrow am singing this ?
https://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&ved=2ahUKEwj96Zudt4v1AhV6Q0EAHfVnB-4QyCl6BAgGEAM&url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kM0Neo85Rj4&usg=AOvVaw26Qm6LfFXTDcPVo2Ya-m8r
The first test I did was very faint positive after 14 minutes. I went straight out for a PCR which confimed this the following day. After five days I did a test and it was positive after a few seconds. A strong positive if there is such a thing. Day six exactly the same. Yesterday it was very faint. Today lovely news indeed.Did you tests start to fade away or was is strong line one day and gone the next?