BanditLuke wrote: » Selfish and the horsey set go hand in hand.
trellheim wrote: » I am mystified why people stock up on bread and milk... like... its going to go off in a few days you muppets
appledrop wrote: » I'm wondering this aswell. We are very rarely sick in our house but this year we all had the real 'flu' at Christmas. Never experienced the like of it ever before. We passed it on to each other in the family + couldnt get out of bed for days, could eat very little etc We all lost weight for Christmas instead of putting it on! I would 100% believe we had cornavirus except it was actually our son who got if first so maybe it was the flu. Hard to know.
I don't know anybody who stocked puleneother of these but people do freeze bread.
riffmongous wrote: » The death rate seem to be much higher for Corona than flu though, a factor of 10, this would have been noticed somewhere
The Tetrarch wrote: » The government need to send the army around to the supermarkets to take away the large trolleys.
dontpanic wrote: » That's only 50 confirmed cases - there could have been, say, one carrier in the shop today, and now 50 other people are carriers because they all decided to crowd themselves into the same place to panic buy, which completely defeats the plan to contain this. Going to the shop next week with thousands of cases would probably be safer than today's mess as at least people would be on high hygiene alert.
CrankyHaus wrote: » Obviously gambling's not much use in teaching risk assessment or nobody would have gone, but enjoy your word salad.
Yurt! wrote: » It's possible but surely the health services here or elsewhere would have twigged something was amiss.
Stark wrote: » I'm not a virology expert, but the impression I got from reports is they were able to identify the strain of flu (a H3N2 strain) responsible for the increase in cases and it was one that wasn't well covered by this season's vaccine. In spite of popular opinion, I don't think our health service are that incompetent that they would fail to miss an entirely new virus that represented 25% of cases.
Wibbs wrote: » I had that dose or very similar around Christmas week/New years G. Came on with a sudden fever and chills, a few hours of a sore throat, body aches and then a hacking non productive cough with a bit of a crackling chest. No snots or blocked nose, bit of a headache(and I never get headaches, so might have been worse for others). Didn't feel like any other dose of cold/flu I've ever had. It lasted longer and was a bugger to shift. My lungs still haven't fully recovered even now(which has me personally concerned over Covid). A couple of mates got it, one worse than me(I got it from him), his wife was really hit by it, got the hard to breath thing and needed antibiotics for a suspected secondary infection. They didn't seem to work but it went away in the end anyway. All have told me they've not got fully back to 100% even a few months in. Of my mate's kids only one seemed to get any symptoms and they were very mild. There was a general thread on the usual winter doses here in AH and a large percentage reported similar symptoms and there was IIRC a link that said it was a coronavirus, which before this Covid thing kicked off wouldn't have raised any flags. Set against all that though was the lack of a sudden spike in elderly people getting very ill and dying. Then again it is/was cold and flu season and our wards are full enough of elderly folks with and dying from pneumonia. I know someone through work whose dad passed away in early January and the cause was pneumonia(he'd been under the weather for a while and was in his 80's). Actually both my mum and dad died from pneumonia, both years apart of course and not recently. It's a very common cause of death in the old and/or infirm. I'm sure doctors would have spotted any sudden spike? I'll say this much though; I'd bet if I and others had caught the same bug today and reported the symptoms there'd be a lot more WTF! and panic going on and we'd almost certainly be tested and told to self isolate and the serious ones like my mate's missus would likely have been asked to go to hospital.Total and utter conjecture on my part here... What if that dose was an earlier "version" of the same or similar virus, but not nearly as aggressive, but the more aggressive one has followed on in a way that couldn't be missed?
Mister Vain wrote: » I went to Lidl in Maynooth this morning. Not too many people there but the few that were there couldn't get in the door quick enough. One guy was throwing stuff onto the belt even though there was only a few people in the queue. Still a lot of panic out there.
grayzer75 wrote: » There's going to be a serious amount of food wasted because of the numpties stockpiling.....
The Tetrarch wrote: » RTE: Extra members of the (GARDA) force are to be deployed around businesses such as supermarkets and pharmacies to provide reassurance and support to business and the public. ... and to prevent fighting.
Wibbs wrote: » as an addition to this, the 1918 Spanish flu followed this path. The first wave while a bad dose wasn't nearly so deadly, it was the second wave/mutation that killed millions(people who got the first dose appear to have had some immunity).
Feisar wrote: » Just on the general topic, do people not keep a decent stock of stuff at home regardless of the current scenario?