Author Topic: Covid 19  (Read 69927 times)

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Offline SteveH

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Re: Covid 19
« Reply #300 on: October 18, 2020, 12:16:36 pm »
Excellent little film by Noah Lindquist on You Tube.... "Wear a mask"     clappinghappy        clappinghappy            clappinghappy

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ltjBT_TuUVA

Offline SteveH

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Re: Covid 19
« Reply #301 on: October 23, 2020, 10:09:21 am »
Interesting detailed article with contact information.............

The new advice given to people who were previously shielding as coronavirus cases soar in Wales
Wales' Chief Medical Officer Dr Frank Atherton is sending letters to everyone on the shielding patients list (SPL)

https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/health/shielding-advice-wales-vulnerable-coronavirus-19147816



Offline SteveH

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Re: Covid 19........New Colwyn Bay test centre
« Reply #302 on: November 02, 2020, 11:07:55 am »
November 02, 2020
A new testing station will open tomorrow (3 November) in Colwyn Bay to make it easier for people in the area to get an appointment for a COVID-19 test closer to home.

This service for individuals who believe they have COVID-19 symptoms, and you should only attend if you have one or more of the following symptoms:

- a high temperature
- a new, continuous cough
- a loss or change to your sense of smell or taste

The drive-through facility has been set up at Eirias Park and will be in operation for the next two to three weeks. The site is accessed via the entrance to Eirias Events Centre, off Abergele Road, Opposite Colwyn Bay fire station.

This is not a walk-in service and people will need to make an appointment to have a test.

Details about how to apply for a test can be found on the Welsh Government website here.  https://gov.wales/apply-coronavirus-covid-19-test

Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board has worked in partnership with Conwy County Council, Public Health Wales and the UK Government Department of Health and Social Care to set this testing station up.


Offline SteveH

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Re: Covid 19
« Reply #303 on: November 03, 2020, 10:37:16 am »
I caught the end of a BBC programme last night, very hard hitting and emotional, I have found the link (below) those who think it is OK to break the rules need to watch this.
 
 Critical: Inside Intensive Care      https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000j7wf

When the Royal Gwent Hospital in Newport found itself at the epicentre of the coronavirus pandemic, staff at the Intensive Care Unit began to film their own lives, in and out of work. The result is a powerful new documentary showing life in critical care as the virus threatens to overwhelm the NHS.

The Intensive Care teams are on the frontline in the battle against coronavirus, and we see the emotional impact their work has on them – as well as the gratitude they feel for the public support. The film shows the staff working tirelessly to triple the unit’s bed capacity, the struggles coping with PPE and the toll the epidemic takes on family life.

This unique documentary, filmed entirely by NHS staff, presents an extraordinary personal insight into hospital life during the most serious public health crisis in living memory.

Produced by the BAFTA Cymru-award-winning team behind Critical: Inside Intensive Care, the 60-minute documentary for BBC One Wales follows the lives of medical staff during the four weeks from the time the lockdown came into force, until the number of cases begins to level off in late April.

Filmed on mobile phones and small cameras, the film captures life at the sharp end of the fight against the virus, as the dedicated medical staff struggle to contain the outbreak. The Aneurin Bevan Health Board that covers Newport and the Gwent Valleys emerged as one of the UK’s coronavirus hotspots, with more cases than anywhere outside London, per head of population.

Wales has fewer intensive care beds than anywhere else in Britain. This, alongside an aging population, long-standing social problems and close proximity to the urban populations of England, meant that the Gwent outbreak was one of the most serious in Britain.

Intensive Care Consultant Dr David Hepburn recovered from coronavirus to return to work on the unit. He says in the film: ‘There’s a huge variation in the demographic, but traditionally this has been an area of high social deprivation and particular health problems, and Newport is known for seeing more extreme pathology than in some of the more metropolitan areas like Cardiff, so not a desperately healthy population. But at the minute, we are at the epicentre of this outbreak, outside the big metropolitan areas of London and Birmingham.’

‘Per head of population, we are seeing more people in Newport who are desperately unwell than most areas and certainly than anywhere else in Wales.’

Emotional video diaries show doctors and nurses leaving their families to come into work to find the unit full of patients on ventilators. It shows the challenges of communicating with colleagues in full PPE (Personal Protective Equipment) and the heartbreak of having to tell relatives over the phone that their loved ones have died, as the hospital is closed to visitors.

It shows the extraordinary outpouring of public support for NHS staff, with gifts of food and drink sent to the unit and the reaction of staff the Thursday night Clap for Carers. We see how the staff work together to keep morale high under incredibly traumatic circumstances.

Intensive Care Consultant Dr Laura McClelland speaks of her hope for the future: ‘From a personal perspective, as much as the lockdown has been difficult, it’s been quite a period of reflection and prioritisation.

‘I believe that the inclination of mankind to recognize the value of the family and the community and time spent just being and appreciating what they have, their health, the health service, is something we can bring forward into the future.’

Offline SteveH

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Re: Covid 19
« Reply #304 on: November 09, 2020, 03:22:06 pm »
Covid vaccine: First 'milestone' vaccine offers 90% protection

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-54873105

Offline Hugo

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Re: Covid 19
« Reply #305 on: November 11, 2020, 10:44:16 am »
Covid vaccine: First 'milestone' vaccine offers 90% protection

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-54873105

That is the best news we have had for a long time.       I take it that the Organisers of the protest rally on the Llandudno Promenade and those daft enough to support it will not have the audacity to ask for a vaccine when it comes here to Wales.

Offline Ian

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Re: Covid 19
« Reply #306 on: November 11, 2020, 11:36:28 am »
It's looking promising, although there are still hurdles for it to surmount, more testing and perhaps not least the difficulty of storing the stuff, which needs a freezer at -70C, four times colder than a household freezer.  And they're  expensive.
Nothing is so firmly believed as that which we least know.  ― Michel de Montaigne

Si hoc legere scis, nimis eruditionis habes.

Offline Hammy

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Re: Covid 19
« Reply #307 on: November 11, 2020, 11:50:22 am »
I suspect the challenge of turning the vaccine into powder form for ease of storage will be for more straightforward than developing the actual vaccine in the first place

Offline Ian

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Re: Covid 19
« Reply #308 on: November 12, 2020, 06:39:17 pm »
Might not be needed.

"There may be no need to keep the Pfizer vaccine and other similar coronavirus vaccines at -70°C, potentially making it much easier to distribute them across the world. Two other teams using the same mRNA technology for their vaccines have found they remain stable for at least three months in a normal fridge.

The Pfizer vaccine candidate generated great excitement around the world this week when the company announced that it appears to be more than 90 per cent effective based on early results. But concerns were raised about the fact that the vaccine needs to be stored at between -70°C and -80°C. This is far colder than standard freezers can manage and would greatly complicate storage and distribution.

Now Anna Blakney at Imperial College London has told New Scientist that the vaccine candidate being developed by her team is stable for months at 4°C, the same temperature as a standard fridge. Another vaccine candidate developed by CureVac in Tübingen, Germany, remains stable for at least three months when stored at a standard refrigerator temperature, the company announced on 12 November.

The same should be true for the Pfizer vaccine, says Blakney. “I guarantee that they are doing the exact same studies.”"
Nothing is so firmly believed as that which we least know.  ― Michel de Montaigne

Si hoc legere scis, nimis eruditionis habes.

Offline SteveH

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Re: Covid 19
« Reply #309 on: November 20, 2020, 02:50:50 pm »
It's looking promising, although there are still hurdles for it to surmount, more testing and perhaps not least the difficulty of storing the stuff, which needs a freezer at -70C, four times colder than a household freezer.  And they're  expensive.

Frozen food giant Iceland could help store Covid-19 vaccines
The company has huge capacity for refrigerated storage and is in talks with UK Government

The UK has ordered five million doses of the Moderna vaccine by spring - and 40 million of the Pfizer jab, creating concerns over storage capacity.

North Wales Live can reveal frozen food retailer Iceland Foods, based in Deeside, is in talks with UK Government about how it can help in the vaccine storage effort.

https://www.dailypost.co.uk/news/north-wales-news/frozen-food-giant-iceland-could-19316390

Offline SteveH

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Re: Covid 19
« Reply #310 on: November 30, 2020, 03:50:33 pm »
                                                                                           

                                                                                                   >?>??

Offline SteveH

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Re: Covid 19
« Reply #311 on: December 10, 2020, 10:09:09 am »
People calling GP surgeries requesting the Covid-19 vaccine told by health board 'don’t call them, we’ll call you'

Betsi Cadwaladr health board has said “don’t call them, we’ll call you” to people swamping GP surgeries with requests for the new Covid-19 vaccine.

The publicity generated by the launch of the vaccine has brought a surge in people contacting their GPs trying to get a shot of it, which is jamming up switchboards with expectant patients.

However health bosses have moved quickly to remind people the immunisation campaign is not being coordinated by family doctors and the health board will contact those due the jab when the time is right.

Betsi Cadwaladr assistant eastern area medical director Dr Jim McGuigan said a plan is already in place to contact each vaccination group in turn.

He said: “The plan is that there’s already an appointment centre set up and everyone will be sent an appointment.

cont   https://www.northwalespioneer.co.uk/news/18934335.people-calling-gp-surgeries-requesting-covid-19-vaccine-told-health-board-dont-call-call-you/

Offline Ian

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Re: Covid 19
« Reply #312 on: December 12, 2020, 10:19:40 am »
This vaccine is far from easy to deliver.  From New Scientist today:

"The vaccines arrive in 195 vials containing five doses each and must be diluted in saline before being drawn up into five syringes for five patients.

The molecule consists of mRNA, which is unstable and breaks down naturally in a short time. This is cased in a lipid layer so that it can enter the muscle cells. The lipid shell is also fragile, and the vaccine can only be moved a handful of times before the molecules break down. Usually, any medication that needs to be split into separate doses will be processed in a pharmacy, but this vaccine is so unstable that if it is drawn up in the pharmacy then by the time it reaches the patient it may be ruined, so all this needs to happen near to the patient, bringing a pharmacy procedure into the clinical area.


The drawing up process is laborious. First the vaccine must be “woken up” with 10 very gentle and slow inversions of the vial, and this must be repeated after adding the saline to mix thoroughly but very gently. The made up syringes are placed in a clean tray with all the care of laying a newborn baby in a crib. This process takes about 10 minutes in experienced hands (and seemed to take about 30 minutes in mine). The injection must be given within three hours of drawing it up or be wasted as it will have degraded."
Nothing is so firmly believed as that which we least know.  ― Michel de Montaigne

Si hoc legere scis, nimis eruditionis habes.

Offline SteveH

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Re: Covid 19
« Reply #313 on: December 16, 2020, 05:12:57 pm »
Up to 19 North Wales vaccination centre sites confirmed for New Year mass jab roll-out
The health board is preparing for the biggest immunisation programme in the region's history

The region's Rainbow Hospitals will be in Bangor, Llandudno and Deeside called into action for the largest mass vaccination programme in the region's history.

They will be supported by a network of local vaccination centres in: Anglesey; Caernarfon; seven more in rural Gwynedd; Denbigh; one site in rural Conwy; three sites in Rhyl and the surrounding areas and two in the Wrexham area.

cont   https://www.dailypost.co.uk/news/north-wales-news/north-wales-vaccination-centre-sites-19468384

Offline Ian

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Re: Covid 19
« Reply #314 on: December 19, 2020, 05:55:15 pm »
Well, better late than never.

"The whole of Wales will be placed under lockdown from midnight with festive plans cancelled for all but Christmas Day.

First Minister Mark Drakeford told people to "stay-at-home" after urgent talks with ministers over a new strain of coronavirus.During the level four lockdown period people will not be allowed to mix with anyone they do not live with, with only single person households allowed to form an exclusive support bubble with one other household."
Nothing is so firmly believed as that which we least know.  ― Michel de Montaigne

Si hoc legere scis, nimis eruditionis habes.