It's really not.
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these NHS workers who cannot get to testing stations, I'll gladly take them in my car if it helps but who do I talk to that can sort it out?
anything is better than all those potential tests bering wasted every day
One thing hasn't changed: Wales isn't mentioned in Westminster unless being used to slag off labour in the Senedd. It's not really a Union with our best interests in mind.
'Thousands missing out on cancer diagnosis' https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-52382303
18,000 deaths in a month. Those using the death rate as an argument against social distancing are going to have to find a new argument I suppose.
Can be as high a 20,000 in a peak 'flu season. One point. Deaths are announced - on the BBC for example as "...having been identified as contracting CV. They're careful not to say 'died of CV'. Sadly a lot of those 18,000 would have died soon anyway. However I reckon in about 6 months' time when the figures for deaths from un-treated/diagnosed cancer, heart, etc. conditions are calculated, they'll more than match the total CV -related deaths..
High as 20,000 annually for flu, and this is 18,000 in less than six weeks.
If it's the case that most of these people would die soon anyway, and I'm not saying it isn't, then that would also be the case with most seasonal flu victims. So why do we bother giving annual flu jabs to the older generation and NHS staff?
I think it's based on most deaths being old. We'll all become a death statistic some day, so I'm not getting into an imaginary prediction debate of how and when it might happen.
My point is that the "they'll die soon anyway" argument doesn't hold water when we try hard to vaccinate the same people who'll die soon against flu. So it obviously is a consideration to keep people alive.