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Coronavirus

Indian variant

(168 Posts)
Daisymae Thu 13-May-21 17:48:08

Getting a little concerned about the mood music that seems to be in the air regarding this variant. There are over 700 confirmed cases, it seems to spread 60% more rapidly. I notice that in some areas well over 50% of new cases are of this variant and SAGE are having an emergency meeting this afternoon to discuss. Just when you thought it was safe to go back into the water??

donnab31 Fri 14-May-21 10:04:55

That being said, I'd happily sacrifice overseas travel for the privilege and think keeping all borders closed for the time being is very sensible!

Doodledog Fri 14-May-21 10:06:25

donnab31

That being said, I'd happily sacrifice overseas travel for the privilege and think keeping all borders closed for the time being is very sensible!

Agreed ?

Daisymae Fri 14-May-21 10:07:36

Donna we are not going to get back to normal unless the situation is managed. Some forecasting puts the NHS at risk of becoming overwhelmed as early as the summer. I'm sure we are all fed up with the whole thing, but it's not going anywhere anytime soon. The government needs to be proactive, something they have found very difficult.

timetogo2016 Fri 14-May-21 10:11:43

I said the same on another thread EllanVannin.
It`s bluddy common sense.
Whats the betting we will be in lockdown again this summer.

Doodledog Fri 14-May-21 10:13:02

I think that giving dates for the 'roadmap' was a bad move. I know that Johnson said he would be led by the data and would adjust if necessary, but people have been working toward these dates since they were announced.

It would have been far better if he had learnt from his massive mistake at Christmas, when he had to roll back his promises. It is much easier to give people good news than bad, and he could have given good news in June if the science suggested the time was right, but if not, he could have waited until July or August without causing the disappointment that he finds impossible to deliver.

MayBee70 Fri 14-May-21 10:18:45

Once people are told they can do certain things by a certain date it’s very difficult to back track on that. If they do stop mandatory wearing of masks in public places it will be very difficult to get people to use them again even though the py may well prevent another wave in the autumn. I can’t help but feel that, with there being no flu epidemic this winter due to social distancing, mask wearing etc there may well be a bad one next winter. But that’s me being pessimistic again. They really should stop the opening up of pubs etc next week till we know more about the new variant but it’s too late to do that now.

donnab31 Fri 14-May-21 10:51:49

The chances of the NHS becoming overwhelmed again by Covid is very small now though isn't it?? I thought that was the whole point of the vaccine - it was our 'route out of the pandemic'?
A large proportion of the most vulnerable people have very sadly already suffered with or died from the virus. Largely due to the complete incompetance of the blithering idiot in charge.
But now so many of the adult population are hugely protected, we should never get back to that situtation?
The scientists have already said the Indian variant isn't as resistant to the vaccine as the Kent variant.
We're seeing very sad and worrying images on the news from India and it's scaring us, but they've had huge festivals with no social distancing and large areas of the country in extreme poverty with nothing like the medical facilites we have.

Doodledog Fri 14-May-21 11:35:54

I've just sat down with a cuppa, and put on This Morning, where they are having a phone in asking people about what they are looking forward to now the pandemic is over.

It is so ill judged, I think, but telling in the way that people are looking forward to seeing relatives, getting their children back into things like swimming lessons, meeting up with friends and so on. They are planning outfits and all sound so excited, which is lovely, but it will make any rollback of the 'roadmap' like taking candy from babies.

Johnson likes to be Father Christmas, not The Grinch, so I can't see him being the grown-up in this, and the consequences could be catastrophic.

olddudders Fri 14-May-21 11:42:57

We know that the whole reason our generation was vaccinated first was due to the potential for older people, in particular, to need hospital treatment, which in 2020 led to the NHS Crisis. The fact that infections are on the up does not mean this will happen again, as most of us have had one if not both jabs.

In Bolton there are valiant efforts being made to reach out to wary ethnic communities, with leaflets in Hindi and Gujarati for those who do not read English. In local terms, the best is being done, I feel.

donnab31 Fri 14-May-21 11:51:43

This is why I'm so confused about people panicking!
The press will keep eeking this thing out for as long as it's making them money, but the scientists wouldn't be saying it's safe to continue opening the country if the risk to the NHS was still great.
Why is everyone bothering to have the vaccine if they don't trust it's going to keep them safe?
I didn't want the blooming thing but I had it because I want life to return to some form of normality. If we're going to have a mass panic every time there's a new variant, what's the point?

Callistemon Fri 14-May-21 12:01:50

Why is everyone bothering to have the vaccine if they don't trust it's going to keep them safe?
I didn't want the blooming thing but I had it because I want life to return to some form of normality. If we're going to have a mass panic every time there's a new variant, what's the point?

Yes, we are going to have to learn to live with this at some point.

We are lucky that scientists have developed these vaccines and will continue with research because Covid and its variants will probably be with us for many years, just as influenza mutates, is around in various forms and does still kill people each year.

Once the first stages of this dreadful pandemic are over, this is probably going to be another disease humankind will have to learn to cope with and perhaps need to be vaccinated annually against the mutations if life is ever to return to normal.

donnab31 Fri 14-May-21 12:12:02

Sorry if I come across as angry, it just scares me, the thought of living under all these restrictions for goodness knows how long.
Having a British government tell us when we can hug our children or have our families in our own homes would have been laughable 2 years ago.
Now we're all walking around with muzzles on, scared of anyone we might walk past, just in case they might be carrying the virus with no symptoms (there's still no proof of this) and so many of us aren't even questioning it.
It terrifies me that people are happy to accept this as the new normal.
The deaths and hospitalisations are level now, even though the Indian variant has been here for weeks.

Callistemon Fri 14-May-21 12:20:42

I think it's sensible to be cautious still but at some point in the future we have to start living normal lives again.

After all, various descendants of the devastating Spanish Influenza are still with us but we now have flu vaccinations, thank goodness, which are constantly being changed as viruses mutate, join together etc.

Sarnia Fri 14-May-21 12:24:23

MayBee70

Sarnia

That's the risk the Government took when they gave travellers several days notice about flights from India and invited an Indian delegation to the G7 summit. Extremely risky and now the chickens are coming home to roost.

Would that be the Indian delegates that tested positive for the virus by any chance? That didn’t even sneak in via Turkey but were invited here....

Yes, that's them. India isn't even a member of the G7. We shouldn't have invited them and they should have declined. But Boris has the whiff of a trade deal so that's ok, then.

Doodledog Fri 14-May-21 12:49:44

There seems to be a lot of 'I'm alright Jack' coming through, though.

What about the young people who have given up so much to protect the older generations, but have not been vaccinated? My son and son-in-law have not had their vaccinations yet, and both have worked throughout the pandemic, restricted their lives enormously (including both cancelling weddings) and who knows whether their jobs will survive the inevitable Austerity that will be brought in 'to pay for this'.

It is, apparently, mostly younger people who are suffering most from the Indian variant, so is it not the turn of the older generations to support them? It is not just death rates that matter - Long Covid is a life-changing condition that affects significant numbers, and its duration and trajectory is not fully understood yet.

For the young to see older people saying 'Oh, but we've been doubly vaccinated, why can't we start seeing people again?' must be infuriating. There is a lot of inter-generational conflict whipped up by the media, but I can't help feeling that in this case it would be justified.

3nanny6 Fri 14-May-21 13:01:44

Just heard that Boris is doing a t.v call today at 5p.m to discuss the Indian variant all sounds a bit scary to me.

LindaPat Fri 14-May-21 13:02:18

Just announced - Boris to hold a press conference today. 4 have died with the Indian variant.

Ilovecheese Fri 14-May-21 13:05:12

I think if even Boris Johnson is concerned about this, it doesn't look hopeful for getting back to normal as soon as we all hoped.

GrannyGravy13 Fri 14-May-21 13:08:10

Bugger!!!!!!

MayBee70 Fri 14-May-21 13:14:42

donnab31

Sorry if I come across as angry, it just scares me, the thought of living under all these restrictions for goodness knows how long.
Having a British government tell us when we can hug our children or have our families in our own homes would have been laughable 2 years ago.
Now we're all walking around with muzzles on, scared of anyone we might walk past, just in case they might be carrying the virus with no symptoms (there's still no proof of this) and so many of us aren't even questioning it.
It terrifies me that people are happy to accept this as the new normal.
The deaths and hospitalisations are level now, even though the Indian variant has been here for weeks.

Can you please show me the scientific evidence that shows that people are not asymptomatic carriers please? And can I point out that hospitalisation and deaths follow several weeks after infection rates rise. By the way, I’m quite happy to wear a ‘muzzle’ to protect you and others if I happen to be a carrier, symptomatic or asymptomatic.

LindaPat Fri 14-May-21 13:15:08

Sorry 3nanny6, you were a bit quicker off the mark than me! x

eazybee Fri 14-May-21 13:23:03

I am just furious with all the selfish people who saw fit to travel to, and return from, India and Pakistan, knowing the risks. As an earlier poster said, and was castigated for it, what happened to personal responsibility?

Doodledog Fri 14-May-21 13:26:25

eazybee

I am just furious with all the selfish people who saw fit to travel to, and return from, India and Pakistan, knowing the risks. As an earlier poster said, and was castigated for it, what happened to personal responsibility?

The earlier poster wasn't castigated for bringing up personal responsibility, but for appearing to imply that the ethnic origin of the woman she had seen commuting on travellers was somehow ironic.

Kali2 Fri 14-May-21 13:26:43

GrannyGravy13

Bugger!!!!!!

Couldn't have said it better.

Callistemon Fri 14-May-21 13:33:03

Can you please show me the scientific evidence that shows that people are not asymptomatic carriers please? And can I point out that hospitalisation and deaths follow several weeks after infection rates rise. By the way, I’m quite happy to wear a ‘muzzle’ to protect you and others if I happen to be a carrier, symptomatic or asymptomatic.

Yes, I think muzzles may become the norm when in large gatherings of people as they have been in the Far East for a long time.

I can still speak up so not exactly muzzled.