What else could go wrong, right?
Dido 'Queen of Carnage' Harding to lead UK's Institute for Health Protection because Test and Trace went so well
Baroness Dido Harding, head of the UK's COVID-19 Test and Trace organisation and former CEO of TalkTalk, is set to lead the National Institute for Health Protection, the agency being created by the government to replace Public Health England. The appointment appears to be a ringing endorsement of Harding's track record leading …
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 12:43 GMT Jellied Eel
well..
Her husband just happens to be an MP and had called for the NHS to be replaced by insurance, and for PHE to be scrapped. Stage 1 complete?
Not entirely sure what Penrose's new NHS would be given it's already (part) funded by National Insurance. Somehow, I suspect it'd be modelled on the US system, with many of the same players. And of course problems..
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 21:51 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: well..
@Jellied Eel
You haven't a clue have you. National insurance was merged about 12 years ago with income tax by Gordon Brown.The national insurance name is only kept because if it was all bracketed under "income tax"??? Imagine the problems if the true income tax percentage was revealed. Bet you still think "road tax" is a thing for roads…
Cheers… Ishy
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 10:59 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: well..
Yes, Vehicle Excise Duty aka "road tax" does pay directly for roads since April:
https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cbp-8899/
RIS 2 began operating on 1 April 2020 and will run until 31 March 2025. It is funded directly from motoring taxes – Vehicle Excise Duty – via a roads fund. The RIS 2 budget is £27.4 billion. RIS 2 was published alongside the 2020 Budget, which highlighted three schemes that are part of RIS 2: dualling the A66 Trans-Pennine route, upgrading the A46 Newark bypass, and building the Lower Thames Crossing. HE has also been asked to make £2.3 billion of additional savings on operating and capital expenditure during RIS 2.
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 16:15 GMT Jellied Eel
Re: well..
Imagine the problems if the true income tax percentage was revealed. Bet you still think "road tax" is a thing for roads…
Nope, but I do think VAT is to pay for the government adding value to the things we buy. Or perhaps I should have added a /sarc tag. Perception is we already fund the NHS via an insurance premium... So if the NHS were changed to a US-style 'private' insurance model, do you think the government would scrap NI(C)s so we could pay insurers instead?
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Thursday 20th August 2020 11:01 GMT CrazyOldCatMan
Re: well..
and for PHE to be scrapped. Stage 1 complete?
It's the usual Whitehall bait and switch. What was left out of the announcement was that the very people at PHE who messed up the Covid response (doubtless spurred on by the utter lack of comprehension, resources and assistance provided by Whitehall) were slid sideways into the new agency..
So the names have changed but the people in charge are the same. And I doubt very much that Whitehall will let them off the leash to actually, you know, do something effective..
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 14:00 GMT Hollerithevo
Why bring in Putin?
I would have said the sharks that swim int he Tory pond, and who are already enriching themselves with no-bid contracts, and who have many warm ties with financial interests in the USA, who want nothing better than the door held open for them (for a small fee) in order to ransack the UK. Although I suspect that the Tory sharks will end up being eaten, as compared to a corrupt and greedy Tory, American 'business leaders' are megalodons.
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 19:51 GMT Anonymous Coward
It also works if you remove the extra words...
What could go right?
This is the sort of person that cynical people (who are themselves miserable failures) put in charge of a sinking ship. So they don't have to be seen on it as it sinks. No experience in healthcare or science but a long record of tending dumpster fires isn't a safe, reasonable, or responsible choice.
I wish we could offer you all an avenue of escape, but between brexit and the US administration, you are looking at tough times unless you can sneak into Canada.
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 12:33 GMT Anonymous Coward
Or maybe I'm getting her confused with Fido Dido
> This is the sort of person that cynical people [..] put in charge of a sinking ship
Hardly surprising; Dido is already on record as having promised...
"I will go down with this ship
And I won't put my hands up and surrender
There will be no white flag above my door
I'm in-competent and always will be."
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 12:40 GMT nsld
Failing upwards
Was ever thus it seems........
Local Authority public health teams have done a far better job than the outsourced Tory backers on test and trace, primarily because they have extensive experience and local knowledge.
Harding's husband believes the NHS should be insurance based and not for the masses so inserting a completely unqualified amateur with no recruitment process is not unsurprising in Cummings brave new world.
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 02:30 GMT martinusher
Re: Failing upwards
>So you think the NHS is a well run, value for money, entity
It used to be one of the most efficient health systems in the world. That's before governments started trying to improve things.
You've got to think long term. You can't get rid of the NHS overnight; you degrade it, wait a generation or so for people to forget what it was really like and to get more or less used to the new system.
As someone who's spent half their life suffering under the 'old' NHS and the other half in the warm embrace of the US health system I'd strongly recommend you to look after even the somewhat dysfuctional setup you've got at the moment. I have a pretty good idea what the government's got in store for the NHS based on the various types of health insurance avaialabe in the US -- if you know the jargon it'll be a low rent HMO for the poor and unprofitable and variosu PPOs for the better off. Expect to pay a lot more for health care, as well as existing taxes -- you're blissfully unaware of terms like 'deductable', 'co-payment', 'annual cap' and I recommend staying that way.
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 12:11 GMT EvilDrSmith
Re: Failing upwards
>It used to be one of the most efficient health systems in the world.
Can you substantiate that with actual (reliable) data?
Preferably, data from comparable countries (i.e. compared against efficiency / performance of other Western European countries), since I suspect that it was and remains better than most of the health services in 'less developed' nations.
Also, in what year did it stop being "one of the most efficient"? Again, what metric are you using to make that claim?
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 15:08 GMT EnviableOne
Re: Failing upwards
changes happend in about 2014 when the grand plan of Andrew lansley's Health and social care act came into force.
The NHS as a whole was breaking even, and evn had reserves to deal with a crisis. Once the HSCA kicked in the entire system fragmented, costs went up and outcomes went down.
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 17:30 GMT EvilDrSmith
Re: Failing upwards
Which may be true, but is a description of changes in the NHS's performance with time.
It says nothing about the relative performance of the NHS to the rest of the world.
Or are you claiming that prior to 2014, the NHS was one of the most efficient health services in the world?
In which case, my original question still stands - do you have the data to back that up?
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 21:22 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Failing upwards
This may be the nearest thing you'll get in terms of comparison: https://bit.ly/31bWhX9
Depends what criteria you are looking at: The UK does pretty well here in terms of criteria like efficiency, equity and access, less so for clinical outcomes (still ahead of the US). This is based on 2014, 15, 16 data without longitudinal comparisons (other than spend as % of GDP up to 2014) but does provide some insights on the "efficiency" question.
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 18:33 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Failing upwards
Are you suggesting the Tories gambled with our lives for ideological reasons by throwing money at the private sector to start from scratch rather than doing the right and obvious thing in the situation - namely to scale up the existing public sector departments who have years of experience doing exactly what was needed?
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 09:50 GMT Jedit
"Are you suggesting the Tories gambled with our lives for ideological reasons "
No, for two reasons. First, they aren't gambling; they know people are going to die because of their actions. And second, it's not for ideology, not any more. They're just out to get rich. There is not one of them who, if told that they could have a million pounds or save a million lives, would not choose the money.
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 10:53 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: "Are you suggesting the Tories gambled with our lives for ideological reasons "
You mean the ex-Director of Public Prosecutions and the ex-Head of Crown Prosecution Service, surely? Someone who might actually hold a government to be accountable, rather than lining their nest with friends?
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 18:45 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: "Are you suggesting the Tories gambled with our lives for ideological reasons "
Starmer is a true self made millionaire who was a product of our once great public education system. His skill and ability as a barrister allowed him to climb the ladder. His parents were a nurse and a toolmaker, neither of which will make you rich. I'm not even a labour supporter and I would prefer him to be in charge, what has the world come to?
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Friday 21st August 2020 02:03 GMT Cederic
Re: "Are you suggesting the Tories gambled with our lives for ideological reasons "
Remind me again, who was DPP when a CPS lawyer chose not to prosecute two of the men eventually found guilty of child rape in Rochdale?
Although I agree that he certainly wasn't trying to protect the men because of their gender; he initiated the grotesque change in approach that led to a quarter of rape convictions being declared a likely miscarriage of justice.
Perhaps you feel that's all in the past and that we should judge him by his actions and policies. Sadly all he ever tells us about those is what he'd have done three months ago, never what he'd do now let alone his plans for the future.
But then, this is the clown that knelt in obeisance to the baying mob in support of marxist racism. No, I'm not a fan of the millionaire Sir Keir Starmer.
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 12:52 GMT DenonDJ DN-2500F
Yet more Tory cronyism. Contract your mates to do a job ( badly) Appoint the least qualified with no recruitment process. Give those who have fscked up the most a job at the top table. Seat in the Lords - yours for a bung. The list of Tories and their corrupt, sycophantic or idiotic pals who will be first against the wall when the revolution comes is now getting so long we'll need some sort of algorithm to sort it out
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 06:31 GMT TireIron
Cronyism
Doesn't matter which political party is in power, cronyism happens. Its what happens when you have top decision makers who don't have a clue so reach out to their mates who they believe may have a better idea of whats going on than they do.
Trouble is their mates don't always have any better idea of a situation either...
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 12:10 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Cronyism
The small difference being that under old skool labour, none of the politicians had mates in business they could give contracts to. Not many union leaders desperate to get their software consultancy sideline a juicy government contract.
Still plenty of cronyism, not denying that but probably less harmful than BJ's brand.
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 14:46 GMT James O'Shea
Re: Hmmmm.
"The dead don't vote."
They do in Chicago. And Baltimore. And Kansas City. As long as they were white when alive, that is.
For those who doubt, look up Mayor Daley in Chicago (there were two of them; one got helped LBJ out steal Tricky Dick Nixon and get JFK elected; the Trickster couldn't, quite, overcome Landslide Lyndon an Boss Daley at the same time) and how Truman got elected to Congress, before he was picked as FDR's VP, and how Nancy Pelosi's father got to be the God-King of Baltimore.
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 23:29 GMT WolfFan
Re: Hmmmm.
Pish. The Chicago Machine is a shadow of its former glory, and has been since Calamity Jane Byrne rode a snowplow into glory. (Look up ‘snowplow’ and ‘Jane Byrne’, there’s pictures of her literally riding the damn thing...) That’s 40 years ago, now. A _woman_ as mayor... Worse, ‘ethnics’ with lots of consonants and funny letters in their names, holding actual political power. Even worse, an actual black or two or more in power... Boss Daley is still rotating in his grave.
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 18:40 GMT Eclectic Man
Re: Hmmmm.
On the basis that in the USA Gerrymandering is perfectly legal in most states, I would have thought there has yet to be a genuinely fair election in the USA. Of course, the UK has a (ig)noble tradition of rotten boroughs, a Police Force created to protect private wealth from the unlanded masses, and a privilege system that allows a rich public schoolboy whose belief is that the first job of a politician is to be noticed gets to be Prime Minister.
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 13:34 GMT Anonymous Coward
Take a look over the pond
This is Florida, the blue line is testing and the red line is daily cases.
https://public.tableau.com/shared/KJPZ38MP7?:display_count=y&:origin=viz_share_link&::showVizHome=no
They've cut testing to make the case numbers look lower. If you test less, you get fewer positives, says Trump, and Florida is doing exactly that.
The change corresponds with the switch from CDC receiving the States data to the HHS receiving the data. Presumably they didn't want Fauci pointing out that they were cutting testing to bring the numbers down. Their deception intentionally kills people, infected people go undetected and spread the virus killing others. That's Ron DeSantis killing those people, but its not just a single Republican. It's an organized strategy.
It's not just Florida, its all the way through Republican states:
Utah, Republican, again see the correlation
https://public.tableau.com/shared/59BP67QM9?:display_count=n&:origin=viz_share_link&:embed=y
Mississippi, Republican, see the correlation:
https://public.tableau.com/shared/73M73HJH7?:display_count=n&:origin=viz_share_link&:embed=y
Texas Republican, see the correlation:
https://public.tableau.com/shared/YQQ8CWP2J?:display_count=n&:origin=viz_share_link&:embed=y
Ohio Republican, see the correlation:
https://public.tableau.com/shared/3YNHB9XF5?:display_count=n&:origin=viz_share_link&:embed=y
Vermont, Democrat for comparison. In Vermont they *increase* the testing even as the cases fall.
https://public.tableau.com/shared/BBG95KB72?:display_count=n&:origin=viz_share_link&:embed=y
This is why the apparent fall in daily cases was dramatically more in red states than blue states. It's not real, its a Republican political dirty trick. Who cares if Red state voters die, as long as the numbers look better in red states! They think.
The 'Wave 2' USA peak is a fake, it's still rising. Let's suppose that the peak was actually real, at 70,000 cases a day, it would be approximately 2x the wave 1 peak. There were 140,000 deaths from Wave 1, which implies 280,000 deaths minimum from wave 2. i.e. a total of 420,000 deaths, but it will be more, because they're hiding the infections.
So what about the dead? With all the bodies piling up, how will they hide the dead?
Well Florida again, they're undercounting Covid 19 deaths and classifying them as Pneumonia, heart attack or other symptom.
https://www.abcactionnews.com/rebound/excess-deaths-raise-concerns-about-pandemics-death-toll-in-florida
The current outcomes for Corona virus are 6% dead and 5.6 million cases.
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/us/
If you let them intentionally spread it, through schools to families, spread it through churches to worshippers, spread it through stadiums to sports fans, then you can potentially infect 50 or 100 million Americans, 3 million to 6 million dead Americans.
So turn off Fox News, and its quacks, and liars and anti-vaxxers, unsubscribe from your Russian propaganda Facebook Karen groups, wear your masks, sanitize your hands, and hope these Republicans don't try to profiteer from the vaccine.
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 14:41 GMT PTW
Oh! God! It's you again isn't it!?
Once again, COVID-19 MASSIVELY and disproportional affects the over 60s, er, you know, the vast majority of Republican voters! So of course it's just the thing Republicans would want to introduce/not suppress.
And once again, children are unaffected and have been proven to NOT transmit the virus to members of the same household.
Christ on a ruddy bike, it really isn't rocket science.
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 15:03 GMT PTW
Re: Oh! God! It's you again isn't it!?
https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/deaths/bulletins/deathsregisteredweeklyinenglandandwalesprovisional/weekending7august2020#deaths-registered-by-age-group
Down vote away, cos the facts are obviously so very different in the US, and it's really killing children there. I'm reminded of another post somewhere here on el reg, paraphrasing, "imagine how stupid the average person is, now remember, half the population are more stupid then them"
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 19:15 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Oh! God! It's you again isn't it!?
You said that children are unaffected, and don't pass on the virus to others.
Both those comments are dangerously and provably untrue.
To then get all triggered because of downvotes, and blaming it on your other comment that the "old are affected more" - which no-one disputed, and that "children die less" - which your original post never even mentioned, is a blatant strawman.
Yes, indeed, you've reminded us that 50% of people are stupider than average... And it wasn't by actually mentioning it that you did that!
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/08/11/health/covid-19-children-cases-rising-wellness/index.html
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 17:12 GMT RM Myers
Re: Oh! God! It's you again isn't it!?
Actually, the not enough evidence statement seems to be the current consensus. According to a recent news article on the Science magazine website, there are conflicting results from small studies, and more definitive studies are still in progress. They know children can transmit SAR-COV-2, but whether it is common enough to be significant in the spread of COVID-19 is uncertain.
Please note that this does NOT mean you should not isolate a child with COVID-19. This is more concerned with the question of the relative significance of the spread by children and whether schools can safely be reopened with appropriate safety measures.
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 19:24 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Oh! God! It's you again isn't it!?
90 children in the USA have died of covid. Many had no previous underlying health conditions.
The numbers are way lower than adults, but they aren't zero.
They can also pass it on.
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/08/11/health/covid-19-children-cases-rising-wellness/index.html
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 17:35 GMT John Jennings
Re: Take a look over the pond
3 weeks ago, Florida was posting every test from 450 of their testing centres as a positive...
https://www.wcjb.com/2020/07/15/questions-remain-over-labs-reporting-100-percent-positive-cases/
'a bug in uploading the data', it was claimed..... The actual rate of positive tests are around 5%
You can still get a test in Florida - fewer people are going for them - the queues have basically disappeared, and most nursing homes are done now. The actual testing centers have not gone away.
You can twist stats any way you like - but so can anyone. Its not always some Trumpian campaign, and not everything is red or blue (or red or yellow)
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 19:29 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Take a look over the pond
"Trump now says he wasn't kidding when he told officials to slow down coronavirus testing"
HTH. HAND.
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 19:36 GMT DavCrav
Re: Take a look over the pond
"You can twist stats any way you like - but so can anyone. Its not always some Trumpian campaign, and not everything is red or blue (or red or yellow)"
Sorry, but that's likely bollocks. If testing goes down but the percentage of positive tests stays the same, that means there's a large pool of undiagnosed positives lying around. You should expect the percentage of positives to drop faster than tests if the actual incidence of Covid were actually going down.
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 22:50 GMT John Jennings
Re: Take a look over the pond
Whoha, Dav- I never said that the R number or inicidents were going down - you are extrapolating more than I said. I said that there was less pressure on testing - nursing homes and queues, and was only referring to Florida.
Had you followed the link I provided to the Florida News article - the numbers of positives from 450 testing labs reported in Florida (and possibly elsewhere) was 100% rates for several weeks- the fact was that they mis-uploaded the numbers.
The actual positive rate at the time was approximately 5% positive in the US as a whole - of the tests actually done.
The actual article was rather about Dame Dido, queen of Chaos - rather than a political anti trumpian thing anyway...
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 18:47 GMT Eclectic Man
Re: Take a look over the pond
Check out Montana from the same site:
https://public.tableau.com/shared/BBG95KB72?:display_count=n&:origin=viz_share_link&:embed=y&:showVizHome=no
The same number of positive tests from significantly reduced testing.
But Montana has a Democratic governor, and the number of confirmed cases per day is around 120.
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 15:09 GMT Eclectic Man
Re: Take a look over the pond
@DavCrav
I'm merely pointing out that Montana is an interesting case of a Democratic governor in a state where testing is reducing, and that the situation is more complicated than 'Republican Governors bad, Democratic Governors good'.
I am personally keen that as many people should get tested as possible, provided they get the results in a reasonable time, to ascertain the actual spread of the virus in the population and to inform the public health response.
Sorry for any confusion.
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 13:40 GMT Anonymous Coward
Don't be fooled. P.H.E. is not just about Covid it is the part of the NHS that covers many other preventative measures to keep everyone healthy. Stop smoking services, weight loss, cancer screening etc... This shitty government is just cutting costs by removing it ready for the great privatisation. Private healthcare does not want you to be healthy they want you to spend money on treatment.
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 13:56 GMT Potemkine!
Such a shame
The older ones here should get this lame joke I guess
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 14:03 GMT EnviableOne
Complete Farce
Just like all the decisions of this Johnson government, and everything since and including Cameron's resignation.
If this is suposed to rival the german or any other set-up, it needs to be run by emenent Scientists and or public health experts.
Germany's Robert Koch Institute (RKI) is run by Prof. Dr. Lothar H. Wieler one of the worlds foremost experts on zoonotic diseases (infections that are passed between animals and humans, like SARS-CoV-2) and Prof. Dr. med. Lars Schaade and expert in microbiology and epidemiology
Korea's CDCP is run by Dr. Jung Eun-kyeong who is qualifed in both preventative medicine and Public Health
Taiwan;s CDC is run Dr. JIH-HAW CHOU who is qualified in Public health and Epidemiolgy (and also a dentist)
Danemark's Statens Serum Institut (SSI) is run by a board of highly qualified Scientists and Public Health professionals
Putting Dame Dido Of CantTalk in charge and expecting similar results is ludacrus
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Tuesday 18th August 2020 19:14 GMT Tilda Rice
Some notes for you to read. Also, care on deforestation, as there are more trees in the Northern Hemisphere now than 30 years ago. Don't believe everything agenda invoked humans tell you.
----
The latest example is The Lancet's decision to publish a review of a theatrical performance called Lungs, which is about climate change. (Why a biomedical journal is publishing theatrical reviews at all is a legitimate question in itself.) The very first paragraph is already full of misinformation:
"With industrialisation, deforestation, and large-scale agriculture, greenhouse gas emissions have risen to record levels." [Emphasis added]
No, large-scale agriculture reduces greenhouse gas emissions. (It also uses less water and causes less soil erosion.) While an individual organic farm produces fewer emissions than a conventional farm, organic farms are less efficient. That means more land has to be converted to agriculture, which means that organic causes a net increase in emissions. Here is the conclusion of a recent paper in Nature:
"Here we assess the consequences for net GHG emissions of a 100% shift to organic food production in England and Wales using life-cycle assessment. We predict major shortfalls in production of most agricultural products against a conventional baseline. Direct GHG emissions are reduced with organic farming, but when increased overseas land use to compensate for shortfalls in domestic supply are factored in, net emissions are greater. [Emphasis added]
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 03:45 GMT Stuart Moore
Depends what you're comparing the large scale agriculture to. You've chosen to compare to organic farming; you could alternatively compare it to what the land would be doing if it wasn't farmed at all, which is a valid comparison of you're comparing where we are now globally to decades ago.
Likewise you've carefully chosen the northern hemisphere for your deforestation stat, rather than globally, despite the atmosphere being global... could that be because looking globally doesn't match the outcome you want?
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 17:24 GMT TheProf
Re: How Dare You Criticise........
I read the online version and yes, they do a healthy line in criticising the Government. They also have a number of partisan feminist writers who come out to play at the weekend.
I expect to read several articles about our favourite Baroness (and that's surely a 'sexist' title these days) defending her from the brickbats thrown by males commentators.
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 22:03 GMT Fruit and Nutcase
Re: How Dare You Criticise........
Steve Bell on Dido Harding running new health body – cartoon
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Wednesday 19th August 2020 08:51 GMT hoola
Grrrrr
Everything about this Government, the SPADs (Cummins) and the current batch of utterly spinless MPs is a total disaster for the average person.
As others have already pointed out this appointment has all the hallmarks of moving to a US based healthcare system, sold to US providers with many in the UK completely left with no affordable healthcare. The NHS may not be perfect but in terms access to care, particularly critical and emergency care it is excellent. All the problems have been caused by political interference and then the PFI debacle.
The same applies to Ofqual. When you look at who is on the board and particularly the Standards Advisory Group the fiasco of the exams results simply should not have happened.
https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/ofqual/about/our-governance
There needs to be sackings, not resignations and the entire Standards Group should be sacked for incompetence. Resignations are too good, these people are all highly qualified in the areas of exams, statistics and modelling. The chaos and damaged caused is just too much for them to continue.
It won's happen and we will be lucky if Williamson goes.
Again, this has all the hall marks of Cummins "sod them" attitude.
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Tuesday 6th October 2020 17:00 GMT VulcanV5
The Truth about Dido Harding
I am getting seriously tired of all the criticism of Baroness Harding, and especially the utterly unfounded criticism that she knows nothing about healthcare and, at this time of a global pandemic, is as much use as a chocolate ashtray.
Truth is, Harding studied PPE at Oxford alongside that other NHS loyalist, David Cameron.
With so strong background, it was absolutely right that Hancock, floundering desperately as he was about the lack of PPE in the NHS, recruited her (at Johnson's bidding) to demonstrate that here, at least, the Government knew what it was doing.
Bravo Dido, is wot I say. If more people had been as expert in PPE as she was, none of this pandemic would've happened. Well, certainly not in Wigan where I am.