Thats ok , we can just print more money !!
Problem solved.
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We could just tell everyone their notes are now worth 10x as much. A fiver is now £50 and so forth. Or perhaps take your cash to the Post Office and they Sharpie in an extra zero.
Thats ok , we can just print more money !!
Problem solved.
![]()
We could just tell everyone their notes are now worth 10x as much. A fiver is now £50 and so forth. Or perhaps take your cash to the Post Office and they Sharpie in an extra zero.
Did you manage to find this?I'll find paper with the stats, it was talking about age groups and type 1 without history in the family
To be honest I have not had the time. I will look as I found the resources post through a link sent to me....but it's not new news, even the BBC has reported links to diabetes and covid https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-66054946.ampDid you manage to find this?
Thanks, I came across that article and a few others. As far as I can tell, and maybe worth mentioning, there's no real evidence linking it to covid infections as such. It seems to be one of a few different theories.To be honest I have not had the time. I will look as I found the resources post through a link sent to me....but it's not new news, even the BBC has reported links to diabetes and covid https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-66054946.amp
Thank you. It's not been a great experience at all and it seems if her Dr was willing to do a house call when asked she could have avoided the ambulance trip and five week stay.@slowworm Hope your Mom is better soon mate.
I believe you mate believe me. I’ll leave it at that. Hope your Moms well and home soon.Thank you. It's not been a great experience at all and it seems if her Dr was willing to do a house call when asked she could have avoided the ambulance trip and five week stay.
Well a bit of a bump and moan. My elderly mum has been in hospital for several weeks with pneumonia and a bad lung infection that's required weeks of treatment.
When she was admitted there was a patient with flu and another with covid on her ward, luckily she didn't catch it then. However after moving wards another patient seems to have caught it and nothing meaningful was done to protected the other patients and now mum has caught it and is very poorly.
It seems strange to me, after all the fuss over covid, that hospitals don't do anything to stop elderly patients with lung problems from catching it. No limit on visitors, no mask wearing, hand washing and even with infected patients on a ward some staff were not wearing masks and patients still sharing equipment.
They also just assume you're not infections after 7 days.
I can see a more harmful strain doing a lot of damage in future.
Maybe because with the initial panic over, the original proposition of treating COVID like one would seasonal flu was found, on reflection, to be generally appropriate.
I can understand that with many people, and I've taken that approach for myself more or less from the start. However, for a ward full of elderly patients with serious lung infections I don't think it should be completely ignored.
It also doesn't make sense from a bed blocking perspective as it means people staying in for another 7 days or more. In my mums case she was underweight when she went in, lost 20% of her weight whilst in with pneumonia and has now lost another 10% with covid.
At least today she seems to be getting over the worst, just hoping she's not picked up yet another infection.
I don´t what I have caught in december and beginning of this year. Been coughin my loungs out nearly.
First stint was almost whole of december and into beginning of january. Then it went over.
Next stint came early february and lasted until end of month. And still not 100% over.
When it was worst in february I had to sit in bed, as soon as I put my head down non-stop coughin started. And even sitting I had cough attacks every hour or so.
I can understand that with many people, and I've taken that approach for myself more or less from the start. However, for a ward full of elderly patients with serious lung infections I don't think it should be completely ignored.
It also doesn't make sense from a bed blocking perspective as it means people staying in for another 7 days or more. In my mums case she was underweight when she went in, lost 20% of her weight whilst in with pneumonia and has now lost another 10% with covid.
At least today she seems to be getting over the worst, just hoping she's not picked up yet another infection.
I´d say I´m 98% recovered.Hope you fully recover soon mate.
Did you get a test? I don't think the current strain of covid lasts very long, hospital assumes 7 days. Plenty of other things about though.I don´t what I have caught in december and beginning of this year. Been coughin my loungs out nearly.