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Is it just me or have SF vanished?

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 74,058 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    aido79 wrote: »
    What's even worse is the fact that he is a medical scientist at St James hospital

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darren_O'Rourke

    It's very worrying that someone from a medical science background would spread this.

    Yet...others are saying there is nothing essentially wrong with wearing non medical masks.
    I don't think he was suggesting these for frontline medical staff was he?

    https://www.breakingnews.ie/ireland/ecdc-non-medical-face-masks-in-busy-closed-spaces-could-be-considered-993107.html

    I see more and more people wearing some type of mask from cheap throw away ones to scarves. (cue balaclava jokes :) )


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,381 ✭✭✭Yurt2


    aido79 wrote: »
    What's even worse is the fact that he is a medical scientist at St James hospital

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darren_O'Rourke

    It's very worrying that someone from a medical science background would spread this.

    Actually I was listening to a British medical professional on the Economist podcast who was saying that in the absence of masks, as hoc created masks from tea-towels or other materials are an acceptable substitute.

    He was commenting on British CDC advice on the same.

    But bash away


  • Posts: 8,350 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    We have people there already, clearly versed in local business. Did they have a role?
    I mean, it wasn't as if spotting the problems with the gear was a specialised skill. A simple photo of the problems with the equipment on Twitter showed every man woman and child what the issue was with it.

    https://www.dfa.ie/irish-embassy/china/about-us/team-ireland-china/

    So insted of taking delivery of an order of 100,000 pieces of PPE having 80% meeting the required standards, you waste couple of weeks getting 80,000 pieces of the required standard and possibly expose IDA staff to COVID-19.

    That's what you would do?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 74,058 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Not at all, the issue is to deal with the crisis, not make it worse by adding confounding factors.

    If someone came to us and said "make reagent" or "make test kits" - we'd say 'no' (after we'd finished laughing).

    If someone goes to Lilly and says "make reagent" - Lilly will say "no problem, just let us get the 'recipe' then we're away"

    If that loon Tully goes into Abbott in Cootehill and says "I hear Abbott employ thousands in Ireland and you make Covid-19 test kits, maybe you could make some here" they might say "sure, no problem - can SF tell us how to convert an infant formula line to make reagent......and in the mean time what are the rest of the world going to do when we take 15% of the world's production capacity for skimmed milk for use in infant formula off line?"

    Except, she didn't say that, did she?

    As I said to blanch last night, it is not as if other deputy's haven't made suggestions that were wrong in fact or just plain loony tunes...FG/FF?Lab the Greens (lets grow veggies on our windowsills everyone!)

    The bile unleashed from the FG protection racket here is a sight to behold sometimes.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30,970 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    I have no SF specific agenda on this. I am in business, I am used to solving logistical problems.
    I don't as a rule begin a conversation by saying...'ah no..no that can't be done'.

    Times of crisis, you move mountains. Or you at least, look at ways of moving the mountain.

    https://www.dfa.ie/irish-embassy/china/about-us/team-ireland-china/

    Why the link to the Embassy team?

    Are you suggesting that our man or woman in Beijing, a career civil servant diplomat, is qualified to assess the product quality of PPE equipment?

    If you are, you really should think again. Whatever the qualities of our diplomats, and I would personally know quite a significant number of them from my time in the civil service, and many if not most of them, are brilliant at what they do, they certainly don't qualify as inspectors of PPE.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 436 ✭✭Sultan_of_Ping


    Yet...others are saying there is nothing essentially wrong with wearing non medical masks.
    I don't think he was suggesting these for frontline medical staff was he?

    https://www.breakingnews.ie/ireland/ecdc-non-medical-face-masks-in-busy-closed-spaces-could-be-considered-993107.html

    I see more and more people wearing some type of mask from cheap throw away ones to scarves. (cue balaclava jokes :) )

    Non-medical face masks doesn't mean any old mask - what's the filtration efficiency of a bandana?

    Cloth masks would be useless for viruses - the particles would jus slip throug the weave no matter how many folds you put in it. So unless you can pop in some kind of efficient filter all you are doing is creating a false sense of security which will lead people into situations where they think they are protected but they are most definitely not.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 436 ✭✭Sultan_of_Ping


    Yurt! wrote: »
    Actually I was listening to a British medical professional on the Economist podcast who was saying that in the absence of masks, as hoc created masks from tea-towels or other materials are an acceptable substitute.

    He was commenting on British CDC advice on the same.

    But bash away

    The British don't have a CDC - are you talking about the ECDC or HPE or HPS?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 74,058 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    jh79 wrote: »
    So insted of taking delivery of an order of 100,000 pieces of PPE having 80% meeting the required standards, you waste couple of weeks getting 80,000 pieces of the required standard and possibly expose IDA staff to COVID-19.

    That's what you would do?

    When dealing with a known source of dodgy supplies, would it not occur to you to put some scrutiny in place?
    We have people there already, exposed to the virus everyday.

    The very fact that a supplier knows that a consignment is likely to be scrutinised will often stop them chancing their arm.

    I don't know if it was logistically possible to do all this...but I am certainly not going to censor or protect by not asking questions.
    Questions need to be asked all the time. And answers need to be forthcoming. It's called transparency.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,374 ✭✭✭aido79


    Yet...others are saying there is nothing essentially wrong with wearing non medical masks.
    I don't think he was suggesting these for frontline medical staff was he?

    https://www.breakingnews.ie/ireland/ecdc-non-medical-face-masks-in-busy-closed-spaces-could-be-considered-993107.html

    I see more and more people wearing some type of mask from cheap throw away ones to scarves. (cue balaclava jokes :) )

    Maybe he wasn't but you still haven't answered what the frontline staff should wear during the 2 week delay in getting the ppe from China under your procurement system.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,381 ✭✭✭Yurt2


    The British don't have a CDC - are you talking about the ECDC or HPE or HPS?

    Don't know what the name of it is exactly, but the equivalent org of the CDC in the US. The gent was commenting on their advice which was on using other materials to make masks in the absence of professionally produced ones.

    Feel free to listen to the podcast if you so wish, it's the Economist's Editor's Pick podcast latest one


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,929 ✭✭✭threeball


    Oh get lost and find someone else to misrepresent Sultan.

    What was it...10 jets...were mobilised to go get this stuff, that was 'moving a mountain,. Are you telling me mobilising a team to inspect the shipment was an unmovable mountain? Bull****.

    You can't get in to the fcuking country for 14 days. The pilots couldn't even get off the plane. How do you propose sending a team to oversee production, or should the health staff just sit around for 3 weeks while we get the minute details sorted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,374 ✭✭✭aido79


    Yurt! wrote: »
    Actually I was listening to a British medical professional on the Economist podcast who was saying that in the absence of masks, as hoc created masks from tea-towels or other materials are an acceptable substitute.

    He was commenting on British CDC advice on the same.

    But bash away

    Did he show any evidence of how effective these would be against viruses?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,381 ✭✭✭Yurt2


    aido79 wrote: »
    Did he show any evidence of how effective these would be against viruses?

    He basically said they're not as bad as you'd imagine, that if it seals off the nose and mouth it basically does the same job as a surgical mask for the general public

    The podcast is up online if you wish to have a listen


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,518 ✭✭✭blackwhite


    How many 'successful businesses' would place an order of that scale, with a known unreliable, quality wise, source and not do some due diligence before accepting the order? And what business management would not face criticism from owners if they did?

    I don't know of a single one.

    What was it we said about shifting the goalposts :rolleyes:



    If the business had a choice between waiting an extra 14 days for supplies that they business would fail without; or taking immediate delivery to avoid business failure. They'd take the risk of having to discard a percentage of the supplies.

    What they wouldn't do is piss around proposing solutions that they know aren't feasible - or try to ignore what reality is presented to them


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 436 ✭✭Sultan_of_Ping


    Yurt! wrote: »
    Don't know what the name of it is exactly, but the equivalent org of the CDC in the US. The gent was commenting on their advice which was on using other materials to make masks in the absence of professionally produced ones.

    Rupert Beale, an infections biologist at the Francis Crick Institute? He's the one referenced in the article linked to the podcast.....

    Looks like he was referring to two studies...
    Ben Cowling, an epidemiologist at Hong Kong University, measured the amount of virus shed, in half an hour of breaths and coughs, by participants infected with a variety of respiratory viruses, including influenza, rhinovirus and coronaviruses (though not sars-cov-2). In the case of those with coronaviruses, 30% of droplets and 40% of aerosol particles exhaled by participants without a surgical face-mask on contained virus particles. When they wore masks, that dropped to zero.
    An experiment carried out in 2013 by Public Health England, that country’s health-protection agency, found that a commercially made surgical mask filtered 90% of virus particles from the air coughed out by participants, a vacuum cleaner bag filtered out 86%, a tea towel blocked 72% and a cotton t-shirt 51%—though fitting any diy mask properly and ensuring a good seal around the mouth and nose is crucial.

    ....both of which refer to virus shedding, not that homemade masks will protect you from picking up aersolised particles - if you have a home-made mask on, and there's a shedder close with no mask, you're goosed!

    The conclusion seems to be me that mask-wearing may help, but the implication, given the reference to not drawing supplies away from medics etc, is that they need to be proper masks, not bandanas or yer ma's scarf folded neatly :)
    For everyone else, washing hands and maintaining social distance is the most important way to keep transmission down. Wearing masks in public does no harm, and may do some good—but that is always providing it does not reduce the supply available to local doctors and nurses.


  • Posts: 8,350 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    When dealing with a known source of dodgy supplies, would it not occur to you to put some scrutiny in place?
    We have people there already, exposed to the virus everyday.

    The very fact that a supplier knows that a consignment is likely to be scrutinised will often stop them chancing their arm.

    I don't know if it was logistically possible to do all this...but I am certainly not going to censor or protect by not asking questions.
    Questions need to be asked all the time. And answers need to be forthcoming. It's called transparency.

    The questioning isn't the problem it's your naive proposed solutions that are getting lambasted.

    Do you not think that such a well resourced party like SF should have a better understanding of how these things work?

    Is it incompetence or opportunistic point scoring behind this is the real question.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 74,058 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    blackwhite wrote: »
    What was it we said about shifting the goalposts :rolleyes:



    If the business had a choice between waiting an extra 14 days for supplies that they business would fail without; or taking immediate delivery to avoid business failure. They'd take the risk of having to discard a percentage of the supplies.

    What they wouldn't do is piss around proposing solutions that they know aren't feasible - or try to ignore what reality is presented to them

    How the f**k do you what is and isn't feasible if you don't ask questions?

    Again, all it took was a photo on Twitter to explain to the nation what the problems were with the shipment.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,518 ✭✭✭blackwhite


    Ok...the FG mantra today seems to be...just give up. Put roadblocks in the way evry step of the way. THERE IS NO BETTER WAY, just the FG way. Don't question, don't seek solutions and don't criticise.

    Fair enough, we get it.


    Where did they give up?

    They did the best possible with the circumstances presented to them - and as a result managed to secure a large consignment of PPE, of which 75% was viable.

    Your solution offered seemed to be to fanny around for 2 weeks waiting for a team to pass quarantine, and then do inspections that would have resulted in the same 75% being passed and arriving a couple of weeks later.


    I guess all the extra infections that two week delay would bring is worth it just to score some political points though - we've seen time and again exactly what Francie's attitude to balancing civilian casualties against "the cause"


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,381 ✭✭✭Yurt2




    ....both of which refer to virus shedding, not that homemade masks will protect you from picking up aersolised particles - if you have a home-made mask on, and there's a shedder close with no mask, you're goosed!

    The conclusion seems to be me that mask-wearing may help, but the implication, given the reference to not drawing supplies away from medics etc, is that they need to be proper masks, not bandanas or yer ma's scarf folded neatly

    I'm not sure where you're taking this. The professional on the podcast more or less said that the advice from the competent British authority on wearing homemade masks wasn't a bad one.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,374 ✭✭✭aido79


    Yurt! wrote: »
    He basically said they're not as bad as you'd imagine, that if it seals off the nose and mouth it basically does the same job as a surgical mask for the general public

    The podcast is up online if you wish to have a listen

    I'd put them in the category of "better than nothing" from what I've read similar to closing your eyes when using an angle grinder instead of using goggles or safety glasses.
    Still no solution for frontline staff who are the main end users of the ppe required.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 74,058 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    jh79 wrote: »
    The questioning isn't the problem it's your naive proposed solutions that are getting lambasted.

    Do you not think that such a well resourced party like SF should have a better understanding of how these things work?

    Is it incompetence or opportunistic point scoring behind this is the real question.


    So making some attempt at inspecting goods before dispatch is 'naive'. okie doke.
    Remind me not to give you a job in procurement so.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,374 ✭✭✭aido79


    So making some attempt at inspecting goods before dispatch is 'naive'. okie doke.
    Remind me not to give you a job in procurement so.

    To be taken seriously you need to be explain how this inspection could have been done without delaying the delivery by weeks.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,381 ✭✭✭Yurt2


    aido79 wrote: »
    I'd put them in the category of "better than nothing" from what I've read similar to closing your eyes when using an angle grinder instead of using goggles or safety glasses.
    Still no solution for frontline staff who are the main end users of the ppe required.

    I don't think the SF TD in retweeting an account talking about how to make homemade masks is suggesting they are adequate for PPE purposes for frontline.

    It is however in-line with competent British authority advice on masks for the general public if you don't have access to professionally made masks.

    Which is what someone was getting hot and bothered about


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,518 ✭✭✭blackwhite


    How the f**k do you what is and isn't feasible if you don't ask questions?

    Again, all it took was a photo on Twitter to explain to the nation what the problems were with the shipment.


    Indeed. Applying the most basic aspect of critical thought or analysis does seem to be completely beyond you alright. We saw it before in your despicable defences of anti-vaxxers (but only Shinner anti-vaxxers mind). "I'm just asking questions" isn't a defence for proffering knowingly dangerous theories time and again.

    Anyone with half a brain could have figured out that the 14-day quarantine being imposed by the Chinese would prevent flying out inspectors - all of course except our resident "businessman"

    Your solution is to send out an inspection team and wait 2 weeks to get 75% of the consignment approved and shipped.

    The simpler and safer solution - which was followed - was to take the delivery immediately and inspect it on arrival in Ireland and have use of the 75% of confirming PPE without delay.

    But f*ck anyone who happens to die because of the delays by you "just asking questions" - right Francie? They're not as important as point-scoring for SF on the internet :rolleyes:


  • Posts: 8,350 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    So making some attempt at inspecting goods before dispatch is 'naive'. okie doke.
    Remind me not to give you a job in procurement so.

    It is if you are getting deliveries from China and India on a weekly / monthly basis.

    The procurement contract sets the specs for the product and they are inspected on arrival as to whether they meet that requirement before being released for use.

    That is how all pharma companies do it. it's the most efficient way of doing it.

    Otherwise you would need a permanent presence in the country you are sourcing from.

    Multinationals operate differently to small SME's like i'm assuming you work for.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 58,888 ✭✭✭✭walshb


    Ballso wrote: »
    Sure Sinn Fein have a simple solution for everything. Solutions they've no experience of and likely will never have to implement.

    But they only ever demand them solutions of others......yo do it, you do it, you do it....


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 74,058 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    blackwhite wrote: »
    Indeed. Applying the most basic aspect of critical thought or analysis does seem to be completely beyond you alright. We saw it before in your despicable defences of anti-vaxxers (but only Shinner anti-vaxxers mind). "I'm just asking questions" isn't a defence for proffering knowingly dangerous theories time and again.

    WTF?
    Anyone with half a brain could have figured out that the 14-day quarantine being imposed by the Chinese would prevent flying out inspectors - all of course except our resident "businessman"

    Your solution is to send out an inspection team and wait 2 weeks to get 75% of the consignment approved and shipped.


    The simpler and safer solution - which was followed - was to take the delivery immediately and inspect it on arrival in Ireland and have use of the 75% of confirming PPE without delay.

    But f*ck anyone who happens to die because of the delays by you "just asking questions" - right Francie? They're not as important as point-scoring for SF on the internet :rolleyes:

    Where did I say anything about two weeks? I said we have people out there already with business expertise and who know and have dealt with companies there. Were they tasked to help here? Could they have helped?



    With 200m at stake, we could just as easily ended up with none of it usable...is the point here. As other countries found to their cost...as posted by somebody last night, Finland's entire consignment was defective.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,518 ✭✭✭blackwhite


    WTF?

    You can try and deny your post history all you want. It's there for anyone to read back on your defence of anti-vaxxers who were "just asking questions"

    Where did I say anything about two weeks? I said we have people out there already with business expertise and who know and have dealt with companies there. Were they tasked to help here? Could they have helped?

    With 200m at stake, we could just as easily ended up with none of it usable...is the point here. As other countries found to their cost...as posted by somebody last night, Finland's entire consignment was defective.

    You advocated flying out inspectors - ignoring the fact that they'd be quarantined for 2 weeks as soon as they left the plane in China.

    Of course - we could have dithered around as you advocate for 2 weeks, and have another country swoop in and divert our allocated supplies away to someone else (as Trump has been seen to do plenty of times).

    Better get a consignment with a usable percentage now, than wait 2 weeks to get the same usable quantity and open the risk of someone gazzumping our order (as well as exposing front-line workers to a needless two-week delay).


  • Posts: 8,350 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    WTF?



    Where did I say anything about two weeks? I said we have people out there already with business expertise and who know and have dealt with companies there. Were they tasked to help here? Could they have helped?



    With 200m at stake, we could just as easily ended up with none of it usable...is the point here. As other countries found to their cost...as posted by somebody last night, Finland's entire consignment was defective.

    Unless you worked in the industry you wouldn't know this but in India and China it's like the wild west when it comes to supplying the medical / pharma industry.

    Feckers in China once even built a fake second pharma plant exclusively for show to foreign regulators so they could get away with non-compliance in the real plant.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,381 ✭✭✭Yurt2


    jh79 wrote: »
    Unless you worked in the industry you wouldn't know this but in India and China it's like the wild west when it comes to supplying the medical / pharma industry.

    Feckers in China once even built a fake second pharma plant exclusively for show to foreign regulators so they could get away with non-compliance in the real plant.

    I could tell you stories about this type of carry-on in China (regretfully from personal experience) but I'd be going way off topic


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