//Are your eyes shut youngmadbog. The deaths are rocketing. Hospital admissions are shooting up.//
They are increasing, not rocketing and if you read the article you will see that hospitals are perfectly able to cope. As an example, Medway NHS trust in Kent had, yesterday, just four Covid patients on its wards. I imagine they’ve more people than that in with broken legs.
//Your a pretty lone voice.//
No he’s not. Read any national daily.
//I don’t agree with lockdowns centrally controlled but if we are going down that road for heavens sake do it properly: a short sharp national stoppage would be drastic but might actually have some effect://
It would have the effect of slowing the spread for the period it was imposed. As soon as it was relaxed the spread will begin again.
On 13th March, Sir Patrick Vallance, the government's Chief Scientific Officer, said this at a Covid briefing:
“If you suppress something very, very hard, when you release those measures it bounces back and it bounces back at the wrong time.
Our aim is to try to reduce the peak, broaden the peak, not suppress it completely. Also, because the vast majority of people get only a mild illness, to build up some kind of herd immunity, so more people are immune to this disease and we reduce the transmission, at the same time we protect those who are most vulnerable to it.”
Sounds remarkably like the “targeted protection” which I (and many others) have been advocating for some time. So what’s changed to move so far away from that strategy?