It should be pretty clear I use all media available and make my decisions and choices .... The BBC etc are renowned for false news but they don't lie all the time.Could you please decide just what your stance is please.
Here you are quoting an article from the Daily Mail yet on another thread your are informing us of your reliable information and not BBC FAUX news , The Guardian, The Mail etc.
I’m not trying to score points, just get some clarity on your posts.It should be pretty clear I use all media available and make my decisions and choices .... The BBC etc are renowned for false news but they don't lie all the time.
Instead of trying to score points actually discuss the topic and the topic isn't me.
I think you typ0ed that out wrong.I’m not trying to score points, just get some clarity on your posts.
As for on topic.....a type1 posting in the type 1 sub forum asking other type 1’s what their concerns are regarding Covid 19.
Not at all. I have an acquaintance just released from hospital after positive results and some manageable symptoms. I am actually quite envious. For her the worry and stress of “will I catch it, how bad will it be, will I die, do I need to self isolate and avoid people” is all over with already. She now just has to deal with the practicalities of finding loo roll.Am I alone in thinking that I would just like to contract this virus now and get it out the way whatever the outcome? Maybe I am carrying it already and have no idea which is also an odd feeling.
Keep a copy of the DAFNE sick day rules and make sure you have a way to measure ketones etc. That’s the best way for us to weather this. Watching blood sugars like a hawk if we do get the virus and doing all we can on the insulin front to avoid a DKA. Good diabetes control is the best way to minimise our risks.The reality is despite all other diseases and ailments there is a killer out there on the loose and that killer is growing very rapidly like a black cloud across the planet with no known way of stopping it.
All the experts agree it's going to kill millions and destroy economies.
The odds of me surviving this are slim.
I've survived flu and a number of other things but this may well be my goodbye as it will be for millions.
I have attitude .... will it be enough?
The reality is despite all other diseases and ailments there is a killer out there on the loose and that killer is growing very rapidly like a black cloud across the planet with no known way of stopping it.
All the experts agree it's going to kill millions and destroy economies.
The odds of me surviving this are slim.
I've survived flu and a number of other things but this may well be my goodbye as it will be for millions.
I have attitude .... will it be enough?
@JTL strangely I have the same thoughts and voiced these to my OH the other day; this may be it for me. This morning, BBC news says there is likely to be a "stay at home" directive for the elderly and vulnerable. With my OH working in London and travelling on public ransport, I dont fancy his chances. His wife (me) and his mother (age 84) live 35 miles apart; he's going to be run off his feet. If he gets it we will all struggle.
I don't know what your OH does for a living but I have been sent home for 2 weeks with instructions not to go to the office unless absolutely necessary.
Currently I am planning to go to the office for 1 day for a pre-planned activity the week after next. But I would not be surprised if it gets cancelled as the infection rate will be peaking around then.
Can your OH work from home? If so, his employer should be more proactive, not just to show a duty of care to an employee but also to ensure long term business continuity.
@urbanracer He works on the Underground!! Some of it is out and about but his boss let him stay in one of the offices last night. but if there had been an incident he would have had to go out especially with Nighttube running. He is being careful, wearing disposable gloves on his commute etc etc but I am scared. He will be ok if he gets it but bringing it home to me or his mum won't be ok. :-(
. There is still no scientific consensus on whether you are immune once you catch it; some people have got it a second time.Not at all. I have an acquaintance just released from hospital after positive results and some manageable symptoms. I am actually quite envious. For her the worry and stress of “will I catch it, how bad will it be, will I die, do I need to self isolate and avoid people” is all over with already. She now just has to deal with the practicalities of finding loo roll..
That's true, but as only hospitalised patients WITH symptoms are being tested we'll never know who has or hasnt got it except that very limited and slightly squewed group of patients.. There is still no scientific consensus on whether you are immune once you catch it; some people have got it a second time.
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