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| Quote ="dr_feelgood"Interesting that this morning on Andrew Marr, Sir Jeremy Farrar, Head of the Wellcome Trust and a Govt and WHO adviser said that mass testing and tracking down and isolation of infected individuals and their contacts was the way to go to reduce the number of cases and that finding effective medication that is allready on the market would be the best treatment in the short term as production of a vaccine would take much longer.
You have to question the decisions of Govt ministers. Advisers are there to advise but Govt ministers don't necessarily need to follow that advice. Furthermore, I would guess that the advisers gave several scenarios ranging from mass testing with a total lockdown to just leaving the pandemic to run its course without intervention. I guess that the government then balanced deaths vs economy prior to making their decisions.
What has become apparent is that globalisation has left us without the capability to mass produce cheap items of PPE as this is now done mainly in China and that the Govt had no effective emergency plan due to running down the NHS budget , public health budget, privatisation/abolition of Govt agencies and not keeping adequate emergency stocks of PPE.
Hopefully this will see increased funding for the NHS in the future and more manufacturing jobs kept in the UK rather than increasing globalisation that has seen these manufacturing jobs move to China with its cheap labour and lack of workers/human rights.'"
The stark contrast that hits me right between the eyes is the diametrically opposed ridiculous situation with the tories in that after 10 years now there is no PPE on the NHS shelves, but yet we have stockpiles, standby supplies, reserve supplies of useless guns, bullets, missiles, bombs, all sat on shelves doing nothing.
And the even more ridiculous situation is that when all these armaments become out of use date, they are re-stockpiled without hesitation
But NHS service PPE? Typical tories
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| With Boris Johnson acclaiming the NHS now, it isn’t going to go down very well with the ERG and the right wing 1922 committee.
The knives will have been made in China
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| What will they do with the two specifically named nurses coming from New Zealand and Portugal. I bet Farage is disgusted that they could not find Nurses from the U.K. after all we don’t need these workers from outside the U.K.anymore.
We have and we will always needs workers from the EU but by the time Priti Patel gets off her box the government’s immigration policy will be passed and home they go, unless of course they have sadly died protecting our family members.
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| Quote ="Scarlet Pimpernell"What will they do with the two specifically named nurses coming from New Zealand and Portugal. I bet Farage is disgusted that they could not find Nurses from the U.K. after all we don’t need these workers from outside the U.K.anymore.
We have and we will always needs workers from the EU but by the time Priti Patel gets off her box the government’s immigration policy will be passed and home they go, unless of course they have sadly died protecting our family members.'"
So if they don't die they get sent home?
Wasn't Nige married to a foreigner?
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| He was and strangely his two children have dual nationality U.K. and German. This unfortunately does not detract from the fact he hates everything EU related with the exception of women in his personal life.
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| Had to laugh at the quote from one of the parents of the nurse looking after Bojo.
"I just find it incredible she, any nurses, can do this for 12 hours," Caroline MGee said.
"Sit and watch a patient, and twiddle away with all the different knobs to keep their patients alive."
Bumbling Boris is definitely a full-on knob.
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| Quote ="wrencat1873"On the subject of government advisors, it was clear from the start that, Boris Johnson chose to flank himself with 2 health experts, so that he couldn't be blamed if things didn't go to plan.
Quite amazing that "we will go with the science" on this one but, on EVERY other aspect of government, they do as they please.
The scientists and experts on climate change, still remain largely ignored and if they are correct, the effects of the world heating up could be equally as catastrophic, albeit, not necessarily in the UK.
The UK is on course to suffer the highest number of deaths in Europe, despite Germany and France having larger populations, Germany seemingly getting through this rather better than the UK.
Lets see how it all unfolds and hope that the peak is getting very close and that at some point in the next few weeks, the light at the end of the tunnel will get a little brighter.'"
Thought we'd had enough of experts according to Gove.
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| What a miraculous recovery. Looks very wel for someone’s who just come out of the ICU. Also ignoring advice (again) to stay clear of people for two weeks after recovery.
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| Quote ="wrencat1873"Indeed
Patel and Hancock pretty much blaming frontline staff for using too much PPE.
True colours shining through.
The current government will NEVER admit any failure or wrong doing.
The procurement of the equipment needed here must be extremely difficult but, rather than admitting this, instead, they like to quote numbers in their 100,000's of how many pairs of gloves and aprons have been sourced.
None of this matters if the front line staff havent got protective gloves or scrubs to use.
As I say, it's an almost impossible task, especially when the bulk of the disposable items are usually bought from China and aside from the logistical issues of moving stuff halfway around the world and EVERY other country needing the exact same equipment, China too has been on lockdown.
A little bit more honesty would certainlt be sensible and not pretending that this is in any way the fault of the people who need the gear.'"
Like I said a few weeks ago, too many here are too biased or not paying attention.
In almost every briefing I've seen attended by Whitty and Vallance, they have openly and honestly referenced the global shortage of PPE and the difficulties in distribution and supply, as well as the difficulties faced by procurement. You must have somehow missed all of this. Yes, as you mention, China was in lockdown - but that's just part of the issue.
The initial issue wasn't supply, it was local distribution. We had plenty of stock but getting it out there effectively and efficiently was the challenge. Still, as of a few days ago 761 million items of PPE had been delivered to 58,000 different settings across the UK. Has it been perfect? No. Has any nation managed a perfect supply chain throughout this? No (except possibly those producing PPE en masse). Was this ever going to be perfectly managed, anywhere? No. But - not disregarding instances of shortages - have the vast majority of NHS staff had access to PPE equipment? Yes.
But let's also look at supply. The main producers of PPE - China, South Korea, Japan and others - were not only in lockdown, but they also blocked exports of PPE at various stages to protect their own interests (understandable). China even effectively nationalised the Shanghai 3M plant - and others - to prevent exports. Furthermore, China actually IMPORTED 2.5 billion pieces of PPE equipment in Feb/Mar from the EU, Australia and others - stockpiling. Add to that the billions of masks purchased by the public across Asia and later the world, and immediately available stocks are almost wiped out globally.
As an example of the challenges being faced, we have the current issue with gowns. Sufficient stock has been ordered (surprise, surprise - from China). But some has been mislabelled at source and others have failed safety tests and so supplies are low in some areas. Another example of the reliance on cheap but poor quality goods from China backfiring - as we have also seen with equipment and indeed tests across Europe, where millions of Chinese COVID19 tests had to be binned after being found to be useless.
Yes, in an ideal world every nurse, doctor, carer, etc, etc would have an unlimited supply of the very best PPE on tap - and by saying that in absolutely no way do I underestimate the challenges and dangers they are facing. Our NHS staff are outstanding and deserve every plaudit being sent their way (as well as a pay rise). But this is far from an ideal world; it's a feckin global pandemic and the entire planet is stretched. To expect everything to run perfectly is naive.
If there's one thing we must learn from this, it's that reliance on globalisation and cheap but shoddy Chinese/Asian markets is damaging. We've shipped our industries and jobs over there, leaving us exposed when it matters.
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| Quote ="wrencat1873"On the subject of government advisors, it was clear from the start that, Boris Johnson chose to flank himself with 2 health experts, so that he couldn't be blamed if things didn't go to plan.
Quite amazing that "we will go with the science" on this one but, on EVERY other aspect of government, they do as they please.
The scientists and experts on climate change, still remain largely ignored and if they are correct, the effects of the world heating up could be equally as catastrophic, albeit, not necessarily in the UK.
The UK is on course to suffer the highest number of deaths in Europe, despite Germany and France having larger populations, Germany seemingly getting through this rather better than the UK.
Lets see how it all unfolds and hope that the peak is getting very close and that at some point in the next few weeks, the light at the end of the tunnel will get a little brighter.'"
You do say some good stuff, but you also roll out some rubbish.
"Boris Johnson chose to flank himself with 2 health experts, so that he couldn't be blamed if things didn't go to plan"
Imagine what you'd come out with if we went to war, "Boris chose to flank himself with the military so he couldn't be blamed, etc..."
And let's imagine the government had dismissed SAGE and its sub-committees and formed their own strategy, ignoring the science - what would you say to that? Let's face it, you'd complain whatever happened. You always do.
In terms of [iobserved cases[/i the UK is currently tracking along the same death rate as Italy, and way below Spain. However we haven't tested as much as some other countries so the rate per confirmed case can appear higher. In reality our deaths per head of population are much lower than most, a more accurate metric given the disparity in testing albeit some countries are at slightly different stages of the pandemic. Spain, Italy, Belgium and France have far higher death rates per head of population, not that it's a competition, but important to point out our strategy is not off track.
That said, frankly I wouldn't be surprised if we end up with the highest number of deaths in Europe, having witnessed the behaviour of large sections of our society who think the law doesn't apply to them. And despite demanding a lockdown only weeks ago, when the police clamp down the press go on the attack, somehow forgetting the fact this is literally a life and death situation. Yes there are isolated incidents of improper police enforcement - but these are isolated.
There is also a massive question mark over whether COVID19 was the cause of death, or whether the victim happened to be infected when they died. I know anecdotally of a couple of cases in which COVID19 has been named as the cause of death where it seems unlikely - one person with late-stage terminal cancer, another with heart disease who suffered a fatal heart attack. Whether someone died of COVID19 or with COVID19 can be two different things. Many countries have different reporting criteria - the numbers are therefore a guideline but whether they are accurate or comparable is debatable.
And in what world have you been living where the UK has ignored climate change scientists?
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| If only the same leeway was applied to Labour. When Brown was PM he purchased a large supply of a pandemic vaccine and was ridiculed by the right wing press for doing so.
I have not seen the same criticism of the current government who purchased faulty tests from China without a sell back clause. This cost several millions, the reason was honourable but the contract was bad.
I have a question why did the Daughter of Gove receive a test which came back clear so he could return to exercising. He is not vital to the running of the country so I guess a little favouritism was used. It would be better if the test had been used for someone caring for the old because they are at least performing a useful task and deserve the protection.
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| Quote ="dr_feelgood"Thought we'd had enough of experts according to Gove.'"
The Government dont like experts, unless they have "scapegoat" tattooed accross there foreheads.
The "excuse" was readied at the outset of the Coronavirus when Johnson said that "we're following the science" on this one, flaked either side by said scientists.
They were there ready to take the blame.
As for Johnson's recovery, I think it's marvelous that his two nurses were from outside the UK, sadly, Johnson and Patel can't wait to "send these people home".
They know the cost of everything and the value of nothing and dont deserve the help and support of the public service workers who we all seem to rely on so much at the moment.
Maybe to help the country recover, they could freeze or maybe even reduce their wages in the next round of austerity.
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| Quote ="Cronus"If there's one thing we must learn from this, it's that reliance on globalisation and cheap but shoddy Chinese/Asian markets is damaging. We've shipped our industries and jobs over there, leaving us exposed when it matters.'"
What's this 'we'?
Plenty of us already knew that deindustrialisation and the trashing of manufacturing in favour of finance, services and leaving it to market forces was going to one day meet its match, but we were dismissed as Leftist, Marxist, Commies, or something or other. My old man has been bemoaning cheap Chinese crap, on an almost weekly basis, ever since he went through a string of textile industry redundancies in the 1980s, as it all started to move to the cheaper Far East, and what we got back in return fell to bits after a few wears and washes.
Maybe we can use £50 notes and share certificates as face masks?
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| Quote ="King Street Cat"What's this 'we'?
Plenty of us already knew that deindustrialisation and the trashing of manufacturing in favour of finance, services and leaving it to market forces was going to one day meet its match, but we were dismissed as Leftist, Marxist, Commies, or something or other. My old man has been bemoaning cheap Chinese crap, on an almost weekly basis, ever since he went through a string of textile industry redundancies in the 1980s, as it all started to move to the cheaper Far East, and what we got back in return fell to bits after a few wears and washes.
Maybe we can use £50 notes and share certificates as face masks?'"
Well said, sir.
Leaving everything to market forces was straight out of Thatcher's little blue book.
Pure capitalism only works for very few and if ever the proverbial chickens were coming home to roost, it's now.
There will certainly need to be a rethink on overseas travel, which many have come to take for granted for so long and perhaps look again on why we outsource so much of of that which we consume from overseas, although raw materials would still be a problem.
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| Quote ="King Street Cat"What's this 'we'?
Plenty of us already knew that deindustrialisation and the trashing of manufacturing in favour of finance, services and leaving it to market forces was going to one day meet its match, but we were dismissed as Leftist, Marxist, Commies, or something or other. My old man has been bemoaning cheap Chinese crap, on an almost weekly basis, ever since he went through a string of textile industry redundancies in the 1980s, as it all started to move to the cheaper Far East, and what we got back in return fell to bits after a few wears and washes.
Maybe we can use £50 notes and share certificates as face masks?'"
Not just deindustrialisation though, is it - for which there have been many reasons since the 60s, though I'm sure you and the rest blame the Tories - it's been the export of jobs from all sectors in favour of cheap labour and operating markets. It began with manufacturing, then since the 2000s we've seen almost any job that can be carried out via remote consumer contact similarly shipped overseas - call centres & helpdesks being the prime example.
But anyway, the 'We' would be heads of industry who favour cost savings over quality produce and UK jobs. It would be successive governments who have favoured 'globalisation' over everything else. Dare I say it: 'Britain First' henceforth?
Of course the quality aspect is a sweeping statement but whether it's cheap Chinese crap such as 'tech', plastic gadgets or other devices, poor quality steel, faulty COVID19 tests, third-party call centres/help desks, poor quality clothing, or a frustrating conversation with "Kevin" in 'customer support' with an Indian accent so thick you can barely understand one another - exporting jobs, manufacturing and services overseas has always been something I've been heavily opposed too - and I've received no end of abuse for those views on here - a left-wing dominated forum - in the past for that sentiment.
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| Quote ="Cronus"Not just deindustrialisation though, is it - for which there have been many reasons since the 60s, though I'm sure you and the rest blame the Tories - it's been the export of jobs from all sectors in favour of cheap labour and operating markets. It began with manufacturing, then since the 2000s we've seen almost any job that can be carried out via remote consumer contact similarly shipped overseas - call centres & helpdesks being the prime example.
But anyway, the 'We' would be heads of industry who favour cost savings over quality produce and UK jobs. It would be successive governments who have favoured 'globalisation' over everything else. Dare I say it: 'Britain First' henceforth?
Of course the quality aspect is a sweeping statement but whether it's cheap Chinese crap such as 'tech', plastic gadgets or other devices, poor quality steel, faulty COVID19 tests, third-party call centres/help desks, poor quality clothing, or a frustrating conversation with "Kevin" in 'customer support' with an Indian accent so thick you can barely understand one another - exporting jobs, manufacturing and services overseas has always been something I've been heavily opposed too - and I've received no end of abuse for those views on here - a left-wing dominated forum - in the past for that sentiment.'"
I agree with most of what you say regarding the outsourcing of work and jobs, but isn't that just capitalism and market forces working as they should? Entrepreneurial spirit in action? That's what the UK have been signed up to for the last 40+ years. Some have benefitted, hugely. Plenty have lost out. I'd like nothing more than to be able to buy things again that not only say Made in England on the label, but like one of my vintage tweed jackets, says Styled and Made in Hebden Bridge, Yorkshire, England. Ask why this can't return, and you get the same old "it's too expensive to make it in Britain". Expensive British manufacturing has become normalised.
In the early 2000s, I used to deal with a bloke who was made redundant from heavy industry and went into web design. Fair play to him for making such a radical change, but I had to ask him how he ended up making such a change. He knew nothing about design, had never touched a web design software package, and thought search engine optimisation involved higher octane petrol. His reply? "I just take a detailed brief, flesh it out with instructions, email it to India, then a few weeks later it goes live, and any changes get made once it's online". The same globalisation which made him redundant also helped him earn again in his last years of employment. No consolation for the thousands of web designers graduating around that time.
It's like anything, there has to be a balance. Unfortunately, the majority of people who preach 'Buy British' are the same people who cheerlead captains of industry, who have shipped their enterprises overseas, and the same people who proudly buy traditional British brands, not realising they are now owned by Spanish investment companies or Indian multinational corporations.
Now the Britannia Unchained crowd are at the levers of power, do you think globalisation and leaving it to market forces will be scaled back a bit, or do you think they'll 'ramp it up'? There Is No Alternative, apparently.
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| Quote ="Scarlet Pimpernell"If only the same leeway was applied to Labour. When Brown was PM he purchased a large supply of a pandemic vaccine and was ridiculed by the right wing press for doing so.
I have not seen the same criticism of the current government who purchased faulty tests from China without a sell back clause. This cost several millions, the reason was honourable but the contract was bad.
I have a question why did the Daughter of Gove receive a test which came back clear so he could return to exercising. He is not vital to the running of the country so I guess a little favouritism was used. It would be better if the test had been used for someone caring for the old because they are at least performing a useful task and deserve the protection.'"
So are suggesting those running the country are less valuable than someone working in a care home?
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| i think we all know the answer to this.
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| [list=[/list Quote ="Scarlet Pimpernell"If only the same leeway was applied to Labour. When Brown was PM he purchased a large supply of a pandemic vaccine and was ridiculed by the right wing press for doing so.
I have not seen the same criticism of the current government who purchased faulty tests from China without a sell back clause. This cost several millions, the reason was honourable but the contract was bad.
I have a question why did the Daughter of Gove receive a test which came back clear so he could return to exercising. He is not vital to the running of the country so I guess a little favouritism was used. It would be better if the test had been used for someone caring for the old because they are at least performing a useful task and deserve the protection.'" Yes, Brown was criticised in the press for purchasing swine flu vaccines - but not widely beyond the usual inflammatory press as far as I recall. It was largely seen as a sensible move thankfully rendered unnecessary. Remember, the press do not always reflect public opinion - as we've seen with their nit-picking criticism of police enforcement of the lockdown. The public are so overwhelmingly in support of the police and enforcing the lockdown, one wonders why the press would dare go on the attack.
Hard to comment on the purchase of faulty COVID19 tests without having been behind the scenes. Perhaps the Chinese insisted on a 'sold as seen' basis knowing the world's governments are desperate? Other countries are going through the exact same problem with Chinese test orders right now. Who knows. Perhaps instead we should be aiming any anger at the feckin con artists who sold us duff tests, and reconsidering our future relationships?
As for Gove - see, this is the sort of irrelevant crap the left bang on about. Gove is a member of the Cabinet. Like it or not, he has a far more senior standing in the running of the country than pretty much all of us, and things run better when the Cabinet is functioning and able to make decisions. I have no issue with his daughter being tested - or indeed family members of the Cabinet if they are displaying symptoms. Statistically it's an utterly insignificant number of tests in the grand scheme of things. Yes, in reality it's probably as much for Gove's peace of mind as it is to allow him to keep working but again - like it or not, seniority has its privileges. Whatever, move on, it really doesn't matter. He got the nod for the test from Whitty and that will do for me.
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| Quote ="Cronus"Like I said a few weeks ago, too many here are too biased or not paying attention.
In almost every briefing I've seen attended by Whitty and Vallance, they have openly and honestly referenced the global shortage of PPE and the difficulties in distribution and supply, as well as the difficulties faced by procurement. You must have somehow missed all of this. Yes, as you mention, China was in lockdown - but that's just part of the issue.
The initial issue wasn't supply, it was local distribution. We had plenty of stock but getting it out there effectively and efficiently was the challenge. Still, as of a few days ago 761 million items of PPE had been delivered to 58,000 different settings across the UK. Has it been perfect? No. Has any nation managed a perfect supply chain throughout this? No (except possibly those producing PPE en masse). Was this ever going to be perfectly managed, anywhere? No. But - not disregarding instances of shortages - have the vast majority of NHS staff had access to PPE equipment? Yes.
But let's also look at supply. The main producers of PPE - China, South Korea, Japan and others - were not only in lockdown, but they also blocked exports of PPE at various stages to protect their own interests (understandable). China even effectively nationalised the Shanghai 3M plant - and others - to prevent exports. Furthermore, China actually IMPORTED 2.5 billion pieces of PPE equipment in Feb/Mar from the EU, Australia and others - stockpiling. Add to that the billions of masks purchased by the public across Asia and later the world, and immediately available stocks are almost wiped out globally.
As an example of the challenges being faced, we have the current issue with gowns. Sufficient stock has been ordered (surprise, surprise - from China). But some has been mislabelled at source and others have failed safety tests and so supplies are low in some areas. Another example of the reliance on cheap but poor quality goods from China backfiring - as we have also seen with equipment and indeed tests across Europe, where millions of Chinese COVID19 tests had to be binned after being found to be useless.
Yes, in an ideal world every nurse, doctor, carer, etc, etc would have an unlimited supply of the very best PPE on tap - and by saying that in absolutely no way do I underestimate the challenges and dangers they are facing. Our NHS staff are outstanding and deserve every plaudit being sent their way (as well as a pay rise). But this is far from an ideal world; it's a feckin global pandemic and the entire planet is stretched. To expect everything to run perfectly is naive.
If there's one thing we must learn from this, it's that reliance on globalisation and cheap but shoddy Chinese/Asian markets is damaging. We've shipped our industries and jobs over there, leaving us exposed when it matters.'"
Dont know if this is the post that you wanted me to read.
You are letting Hancock and Patel off the hook completely.
As you suggest, the "story" that has been fed to us is that "there IS sufficient PPE to go round" and that any issues with lack of "equipment" is purely down to distribution and nothing at all to do with being a little slow out of the blocks or to do with not having sufficient.
There is an attempt to throw telephone numbers of total numbers of PPE is playground stuff and the bottom line is it doesn't matter how many boxes or pallets there are in a central warehouse, the equipment needs to be in the right place at the right time.
Of course, this cant all be controlled at government level, it's an absolutely huge task of procurement and distribution, made all the more difficult by both the urgency of the situation and world demand plus, problems in manufacture.
However, why not have some honesty instead of the "it's not our fault", which is all that the government ministers have said, deflecting all blame away from themselves.
As for being flanked by experts, you clearly aren't a cynical as me (probably a good thing) but, for all other government issues, they are usually happy to take their advice in private and then decide policy and while accepting that the current crisis is on a whole new level, given the crap that Johnson & Co have come up with of so many previous occasions, you can easily see that, given the gravity of the situation, they dont want any of the brown stuff sticking to them.
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| Quote ="wrencat1873"As you suggest, the "story" that has been fed to us is that "there IS sufficient PPE to go round"'"
I can tell you unequivocally, without any exaggeration and straight from the front line, that this is simply not true. My services were meant to receive an initial allocation of PPE - about half did - the other half didn't, and still haven't. There is an NHS procurement helpline we're supposed to call - it either rings out, or they don't have the equipment to send us - and we are, on a per location basis, looking for fairly modest amounts. It's an absolute joke.
We've solved it ourselves in the end, but at approximately 4 times the usual cost.
Re testing - the DHSC has finally rolled out a pilot of testing sites for SC staff; the roll out happened over Easter Weekend, and I got emails for all 72 of my sites - most of which were directing my staff in say, Nottingham, to go to a testing site in Gateshead - and only under some very prescriptive and complex circumstances. I managed to unpick it this morning and instructed local Managers to book people in for tests - all have thus far been unable to, due to lack of availability.
We are being failed; and as a result, the most vulnerable people in society are being put at extreme risk.
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| Quote ="bren2k"I can tell you unequivocally, without any exaggeration and straight from the front line, that this is simply not true. My services were meant to receive an initial allocation of PPE - about half did - the other half didn't, and still haven't. There is an NHS procurement helpline we're supposed to call - it either rings out, or they don't have the equipment to send us - and we are, on a per location basis, looking for fairly modest amounts. It's an absolute joke.
We've solved it ourselves in the end, but at approximately 4 times the usual cost.
Re testing - the DHSC has finally rolled out a pilot of testing sites for SC staff; the roll out happened over Easter Weekend, and I got emails for all 72 of my sites - most of which were directing my staff in say, Nottingham, to go to a testing site in Gateshead - and only under some very prescriptive and complex circumstances. I managed to unpick it this morning and instructed local Managers to book people in for tests - all have thus far been unable to, due to lack of availability.
We are being failed; and as a result, the most vulnerable people in society are being put at extreme risk.'"
Bren, as you know, I was trying to reply to Cronus and I used the words "story" and "fed" quite deliberately and as I suggested, there is a world of difference in having stock in a warehouse and needing to use something "on the front line".
It's like the supermarkets telling us that there wasn't a supply issue with toilet roll but, if you cant buy it and you have none, there is a problem.
Granted the PPE issue is way more serious and the true colours shine through quite clearly, when Tory ministers blame the nurses and other frontline staff for not using it properly.
You would think that given their leader has received excellent care and says that these same people saved his life that, the Tory ministers may be just a little more honest and admit the supply line problems but, not a bloody chance.
Btw, how are you supposed to get your staff to Gateshead for testing ??
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| Quote ="bren2k"I can tell you unequivocally, without any exaggeration and straight from the front line, that this is simply not true. My services were meant to receive an initial allocation of PPE - about half did - the other half didn't, and still haven't. There is an NHS procurement helpline we're supposed to call - it either rings out, or they don't have the equipment to send us - and we are, on a per location basis, looking for fairly modest amounts. It's an absolute joke.
We've solved it ourselves in the end, but at approximately 4 times the usual cost.
Re testing - the DHSC has finally rolled out a pilot of testing sites for SC staff; the roll out happened over Easter Weekend, and I got emails for all 72 of my sites - most of which were directing my staff in say, Nottingham, to go to a testing site in Gateshead - and only under some very prescriptive and complex circumstances. I managed to unpick it this morning and instructed local Managers to book people in for tests - all have thus far been unable to, due to lack of availability.
We are being failed; and as a result, the most vulnerable people in society are being put at extreme risk.'"
As a private business surely it your responsibility to your employees to provide them with PPE? If you have failed to do so surely that is failing at your end and there is nobody else to blame but the procurement team within your organisation? I have watched plenty of medical professionals on the morning news and despite prompting from the likes of Piers and Naga it is a while since you have heard any say they don't have enough ventilators or PPE - how many items have actually been delivered in the last month 700m+? Much to the disappointment of both
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| Quote ="Sal Paradise"As a private business surely it your responsibility to your employees to provide them with PPE? If you have failed to do so surely that is failing at your end and there is nobody else to blame but the procurement team within your organisation? I have watched plenty of medical professionals on the morning news and despite prompting from the likes of Piers and Naga it is a while since you have heard any say they don't have enough ventilators or PPE - how many items have actually been delivered in the last month 700m+? Much to the disappointment of both
'"
You quite deliberately ignored the part where I said that we have solved it ourselves, at considerable cost.
The point however, is that of course we have always had rolling stock of PPE and trusted suppliers; when this thing blew up, we were told by the Govt that every location would receive an allocation of PPE from central stock, in acknowledgment of the fact that they had requisitioned the majority of stock in the UK. Most of my locations never got that allocation, and have been unable to use the emergency procurement line - so there has been a lag in supply, which has probably resulted in way more infections in our settings and in elderly services.
WC - re testing - they are quite specifically only permitted to drive themselves, or be transported there by a member of their household; so if there is no driver in the family, no test.
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