Very true, I think of the Time magazine images of essentially fat = bad, then fat = ok. At the time either fact was correct. What I like about Ivor and Dave Feldman is that they dig into the detail, go past the headline or abstract and like any respectable engineer assess the raw data and root cause. I know in my own area of IT, I have held onto contracts by for example proving my system was not slow it was the customers broadband line, or the email that wasn't received was due to the other sides email gateway - in both these areas I needed raw data otherwise over time I would have been toast.I think it's also a question of how people decide to interpret the facts or the rules. Anyone can take a fact and make it suit their purposes. Remember Barnard Castle.
@Mbaker Thank you for your kind words and I am glad to have helped some one on the way.Hi @hankjam I respect your views, your comments years ago really helped me believe what was possible with diet only, for months when I was just reading and not a member your contributions were enormous - thanks.
Many who regularly follow Ivor know him to be mild mannered and never combative. The referenced video caught my attention due to it being so spicy for him, I think it was due to the person being anonymous, whilst Ivor's posts leave him exposed to the likes of those referenced in @Mr_Pot 's post .
I have listened to all of Ivor's videos (both Covid / low carb keto and cholesterol). I can find, and bought his book to declare my bias. Interesting that his points didn't hit your ears and eyes in the same way it did me, which is not a criticism, but goes to show how something is delivered can split opinion..
I would guess not, I know Dr David Unwin has. My brother-in-law let us know on a Zoom last weekend that he has Covid 19. Which is the closest I have knowingly been to it.Just one question. Has Ivor had the virus?
We have zero chance of "eradicating" an endemic virus. It's here and it won't go away. Just like cold and flu viruses have been for millennia.It's interesting to hear that Anders Tegnell, Sweden's state epidemiologist who helped shape the country's light-touched response to the COVID-19 pandemic, has said natural herd immunity has never been used to wipe out an infectious disease and that "striving for herd immunity is neither ethical nor otherwise justifiable."
https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medical/swedens-fauci-no-disease-in-history-has-been-eradicated-with-herd-immunity—covid-is-no-different/ar-BB1ay6wZ
The key paragraph in that piece is thisA different take on the "false positive" test result claims and perhaps some clarification.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/54270373
The key paragraph in that piece is this
View attachment 45058
So door to door testing which has been noted by many observers in "high risk" areas is doing exactly as JHB said.
Testing random symptomless people. Once again the BBC is economical with the truth.. that license fee money must be at the forefront of their thought (that and the Ofcom regulations of course).
Do you know anyone who's been tested under a door-to-door test regime?
No because I don't live in "hot spot". In fact where I live deaths and cases are extremely low as you know because you live here too.
However with the likely inaccuracy of testing and the number of times the amplification process is run it's hard to tell what is a real case and what is false.
It surely could not be beyond the whit of the scientific community to re-test those who have recorded a positive once to see if they have a second positive test. This could produce some real numbers as to how many are actually infected.
This has not been done and it seems that timing of testing can exaggerate the numbers so that one person can be reported as a new case more than once if repeat tested.
Its simply appalling that we are shutting down the country whilst these inaccuracies (which are totally avoidable) are being accepted.
I despair.
We are not shutting down the country based on positive test results alone. We are shutting down because the number of people in hospital with Covid-19 is doubling every 2 weeks (approximately) and it will not be long before the NHS is overwhelmed.
We are not shutting down the country based on positive test results alone. We are shutting down because the number of people in hospital with Covid-19 is doubling every 2 weeks (approximately) and it will not be long before the NHS is overwhelmed.
The 140,000 NHS hospital beds includes general and acute, mental illness, learning disability, maternity and day-only beds. Also how many of those beds are currently empty?How many hospital beds does England have? 140,000 approximately.
Overwhelmed? are you being serious?
There are allegedly 8,822 patients in hospital in England "with" COVID (not necessarily because of COVID) How many hospital beds does England have? 140,000 approximately.
Overwhelmed? are you being serious?
There were 17,000 in April (still a very small proportion) and treatment is allegedly getting better.
It is a huge overreaction based almost entirely on "positive test results" being viewed as "cases" and "modelling" being used to guess what might happen.
The difficulties arise from staff shortages: if every bed in the Nightingale Hospital were filled as well as every ward in every hospital there wouldn’t be enough staff to attend to the patients. Did you listen to Dr Alison Pittard, from the Faculty of Intensive Care Medicine last night?There are allegedly 8,822 patients in hospital in England "with" COVID (not necessarily because of COVID) How many hospital beds does England have? 140,000 approximately.
Overwhelmed? are you being serious?
There were 17,000 in April (still a very small proportion) and treatment is allegedly getting better.
It is a huge overreaction based almost entirely on "positive test results" being viewed as "cases" and "modelling" being used to guess what might happen.
Yes I agree with you - in my experience of dealing with NHS when kids were younger and more recently elderly parents - NHS were struggling to cope even before COVID - very worrying when you see patients (which I have personally seen) lying in corridors from ambulances waiting to be seen. We once had to wait over 4 hours on an ambulance while my mother struggled to breathe, this was after she had been discharged from hospital too soon as they needed the bed and the attending doctor/paramedics couldn't believe she hadn't discharged herself and ordered an ambulance to take her straight back in to hospital (she had pneumonia and heart failure (not pleasant to watch). With my father we were told he would have to wait around 8 hours for an intensive care bed this was after us being blue lighted to hospital and this was when he had just came out of resus! My brother who has MS waited days for an available bed at another hospital so he could be operated on to have both lungs drained of fluid (he also had pneumonia and was not far from deaths door - again very distressing for the family to watch). Sorry, if I have gone off topic and don't want to scare anyone but in my own personal experience all within the last 3 years I have to say in my opinion I have witnessed the NHS being overstretched and it is very scary and all this was before COVID.What has 140k beds got to do with anything? Are you under the illusion that they are empty most of the time?
I sat with my elderly mother in ICU all night because there were no beds on a ward twice during 2018. A long time before anyone had ever heard of Covid19 the NHS was struggling with capacity.
The NHS has to deal with more than just Covid, and yes I am serious.
Not agreeing or disagreeing with the below article but felt it's information might promote an interesting discussion on this thread.
https://www.itv.com/news/2020-10-31/six-graphs-that-led-to-the-new-covid-lockdown-for-england
The NHS has to deal with more than just Covid, and yes I am serious.
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