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Re: CV and mad panic behaviour

Reply #3075
So you’re blaming the South Australians now ...

Re: CV and mad panic behaviour

Reply #3076
Why are we the covid state?
Lack of funding in health management, like I said NSW didnt cut their budget and had decent numbers of trained healthcare staff involved in tracing, we have airline workers, clerks and tax drivers doing it for bingo money.
Quarantine was Dan again doing it his way instead of taking up the offer of military/police help, his private security firm staff were too busy screwing the Quaranteeny's and letting them out on the town..and the company hit us up for a couple of mill into the bargain. Just been one feck up after another.....sort of stuff you expect in a 3rd world crap hole like Peru. The other States dont trust us either.. a couple of cases here and they lock the borders real quick because they know Dan and team will be struggling to contain an outbreak.

Re: CV and mad panic behaviour

Reply #3077
Then that is the case @Mav refers to, community transmission from a couple of elderly tourists, who eventually presented as unwell. We are perhaps lucky they became unwell enough to present, what if they hadn't?

But I'm not sure they are the root cause, I believe they are a secondary group infected from the returned driver.

Not everybody will become so unwell to require hospitalisation. COVID-19 has a spectrum of illness, perhaps the worse case for transmission would be an initial group of moderately ill individuals who ignored testing and rocked up for work regardless. Like the infamous Portsea set, claiming that it's just a cold while having their own house retrofit with a private ICU!

For every 1 admission, there would be how many people confirmed positive LP?

How far does this spread before it actually shows up, and when you consider that for a moment, ponder a scenario where we are talking about Dissenters, who protest in the city, refuse to wear a mask, dont hand hygiene, to check in with QR codes, and in general, dont get vaccinated.  They spread this virus how far and wide, and dont get tested, which results in further outbreaks and infections that are borderline traceable.

We should see "a lot" of spot fires popping up.  We arent, we just had 73 days without a positive case.
"everything you know is wrong"

Paul Hewson

Re: CV and mad panic behaviour

Reply #3078
Quarantine was Dan again doing it his way instead of taking up the offer of military/police help
Police help? The police commissioner made it clear the police were only prepared to be the 2nd line of defence, i.e. if someone escaped from quarantine, they’d find them and bring them back. Other than that, they were involved in the “ring of steel” to keep Melburnians from fleeing to regional areas. As for the military, it seemed Scotty from Marketing was quite willing to use them as political pawns, threatening to pull them out if Victoria didn’t toe the Federal government’s line on lockdowns and the like. He refused to honour a request for a nominated number of soldiers at one stage to man the borders.

And yes, there should be more funding for health and in particular pandemic preparedness. That’s what happens when Jeff Kennett’s Razor gangs cut things to the bone in the health system.

Re: CV and mad panic behaviour

Reply #3079
.... yet we never got a decent investigation into Victoria's farkups .... Like a RC

It's always been and continues to be someone else's fault. 

Re: CV and mad panic behaviour

Reply #3080
For every 1 admission, there would be how many people confirmed positive LP?

How far does this spread before it actually shows up, and when you consider that for a moment, ponder a scenario where we are talking about Dissenters, who protest in the city, refuse to wear a mask, dont hand hygiene, to check in with QR codes, and in general, dont get vaccinated.  They spread this virus how far and wide, and dont get tested, which results in further outbreaks and infections that are borderline traceable.

We should see "a lot" of spot fires popping up.  We arent, we just had 73 days without a positive case.
What are you talking about, there are 80 active COVID-19 infection cases in Melbourne at the moment!

How many require hospital and other actions depends on how early they are found, it is not lock step get infected go to hospital!
The Force Awakens!

 

Re: CV and mad panic behaviour

Reply #3081
Police help? The police commissioner made it clear the police were only prepared to be the 2nd line of defence, i.e. if someone escaped from quarantine, they’d find them and bring them back. Other than that, they were involved in the “ring of steel” to keep Melburnians from fleeing to regional areas. As for the military, it seemed Scotty from Marketing was quite willing to use them as political pawns, threatening to pull them out if Victoria didn’t toe the Federal government’s line on lockdowns and the like. He refused to honour a request for a nominated number of soldiers at one stage to man the borders.

And yes, there should be more funding for health and in particular pandemic preparedness. That’s what happens when Jeff Kennett’s Razor gangs cut things to the bone in the health system.
Jeff Kennett did a lot wrong but thats a long bow to draw in regard recent events . Cuts that affect the ability of professional contract tracing in Victoria fall squarely on the shoulders of Dan Andrews who as former health minister new exactly what he was doing. Despite warnings from the DHHS in May 2019 that Victoria’s public health team responsible for contact tracing communicable diseases was dangerously understaffed compared to other states, by March in 2020 the division was pared down to only 14 members. Victoria, a state with 6.4 million people, had only six physicians in its health protection branch, compared to 24 in New South Wales and 17 in Queensland.
Andrews was the health minister trying to get rid of nurse-patient ratios and undermine other basic conditions using Howards work choices to do it..
The new Footscray Hospital is another furphy....Its portrayed as the Andrews Govt looking after the struggling west but in fact is a Public-Private partnership which just allows the Privates to rip off the public purse and wont be helping the western suburbs battler. Frankston Hospital has been promised an overhaul given its in such a mess and didnt have enough PPE gear at the height of CoVid. It often has its ER overcrowded and trolleys in the corridors but dont think Dan is looking after those poor sods in Franga...yep another Public-Private partnership which will see more nose jobs and face lifts than dealing with that under-resourced ER dept.

Re: CV and mad panic behaviour

Reply #3082
Jeff Kennett did a lot wrong but thats a long bow to draw in regard recent events . Cuts that affect the ability of professional contract tracing in Victoria fall squarely on the shoulders of Dan Andrews who as former health minister new exactly what he was doing. Despite warnings from the DHHS in May 2019 that Victoria’s public health team responsible for contact tracing communicable diseases was dangerously understaffed compared to other states, by March in 2020 the division was pared down to only 14 members. Victoria, a state with 6.4 million people, had only six physicians in its health protection branch, compared to 24 in New South Wales and 17 in Queensland.
Andrews was the health minister trying to get rid of nurse-patient ratios and undermine other basic conditions using Howards work choices to do it..
The new Footscray Hospital is another furphy....Its portrayed as the Andrews Govt looking after the struggling west but in fact is a Public-Private partnership which just allows the Privates to rip off the public purse and wont be helping the western suburbs battler. Frankston Hospital has been promised an overhaul given its in such a mess and didnt have enough PPE gear at the height of CoVid. It often has its ER overcrowded and trolleys in the corridors but dont think Dan is looking after those poor sods in Franga...yep another Public-Private partnership which will see more nose jobs and face lifts than dealing with that under-resourced ER dept.

Some great people work in ER at Frankston and despite those shortcomings I would happily go there again.

Re: CV and mad panic behaviour

Reply #3083
Some great people work in ER at Frankston and despite those shortcomings I would happily go there again.

My daughter has a very good friend who works there...the ERs are all run by good people in the public system but they
dont get the credit or the resources they deserve and the poorer maligned areas are the worst funded.
When they scrapped the bypass code yellow they just heaped more pressure on the ER's, Frankston being one of the worst hit with a pile up of ER patients....hopefully Andrews can at least throw some money at that area and improve things.

Re: CV and mad panic behaviour

Reply #3084
EB, if someone in the family goes out and sells off the family assets, you can go out and buy them all back but unless you’re flush with cash that’s easier said than done. It’s easy for guys like Kennet to slash and burn and claim the credit for slashing the budget. It’s not so easy to reverse those cuts when State Governments can’t print money or put up income taxes. It’s even harder when outgoing Liberal Governments try to blow a hole in the budget by signing $15b road construction contracts on the eve of an election.

Re: CV and mad panic behaviour

Reply #3085
We’re now sending infected Victorians on road trips through NSW and Qld to test their contact tracing. She managed to elude detection for 12 days before she had to go hospital. Winning!

Re: CV and mad panic behaviour

Reply #3086
My daughter has a very good friend who works there...the ERs are all run by good people in the public system but they
dont get the credit or the resources they deserve and the poorer maligned areas are the worst funded.
When they scrapped the bypass code yellow they just heaped more pressure on the ER's, Frankston being one of the worst hit with a pile up of ER patients....hopefully Andrews can at least throw some money at that area and improve things.

A very good mate is a specialist there, doubt it would be the same person but they would know each other. He was the director of the unit at one stage.

Re: CV and mad panic behaviour

Reply #3087
I hope the road tripper gets the book chucked at them. What an idiotic act. 
DrE is no more... you ok with that harmonica man?

Re: CV and mad panic behaviour

Reply #3088
Unfortunately, to persuade them to be truthful about where they’ve been, they’ve probably been told they won’t be prosecuted. On the other hand, New Zealand can throw the book at the 3 Melburnians who tried to sneak in as presumably they were caught at the airport so contact tracing isn’t an issue.

One benefit of a lockdown is that it gets rid of a few arseholes.

Re: CV and mad panic behaviour

Reply #3089
Meanwhile in Pyonyang, get caught with a south korean dvd movie on a USB and you're shot in front of your family.