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Now ye're talking - to a consultant in the HSE [Questions thread]

12357

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,524 ✭✭✭Gynoid


    Hi,

    Having read your posts a couple of weeks ago I bought the UV light box you recommended. Question - Does the light have to fall on all parts of items inside box? So for eg if there are tins in there, do they have to be turned after the 11 minute cycle?

    Do you know any more definite things on issues like Type A blood susceptibility, why there is gender difference in susceptibility, if some people are more vulnerable like Mediterranean populations due to genetic factors, that kind of thing?

    Last maybe silly question, if I go out to shop, which is rare, I wear an outer layer that I take off in hall and bring to wash immediately because I have this sort of old fashioned idea about the possibility of lingering miasmas in supermarket aisles. Suspended micro particles might be the more modern description. I also wear a mask and a hat, which I wash also on return. Am I being a silly billy?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,829 ✭✭✭Cork Boy 53


    Hi.

    Sorry if you answered this already but which light steriliser would you recommend for use as in how high a spec does an effective one need to be ?

    I can only imagine the strain you and your colleagues are under now. Take care.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,524 ✭✭✭Gynoid


    Thank you very much Pseudonym 121 for answering my questions comprehensively. I feel relieved that I am not being over-particular. It is a narrow path between properly careful and neurotic in these days!
    I will turn over stuff in the UV box. I have a going out outfit as I just have to go out once a week now for groceries. Which comes off and to the washing machine on return.
    It is a horrible state of affairs. But I think it is worth practising all the odd-seeming habits now in case a worse virus or a bad mutation of this one comes in the future

    Thanks again and best of luck and everything.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,819 ✭✭✭Silent Running


    Hi again,
    I'm constantly looking for 'bridges' where contamination can cross without being killed by washing/decontamination/time.

    In your last post, section 13 where you're clean and then pick up your potentially dirty mask to put it in the UV unit, would you not wash your hands after this step?

    Sorry for nitpicking, but to me, that's a bridge. :o


  • Registered Users Posts: 309 ✭✭Pseudonym121


    Hi again,
    I'm constantly looking for 'bridges' where contamination can cross without being killed by washing/decontamination/time.

    In your last post, section 13 where you're clean and then pick up your potentially dirty mask to put it in the UV unit, would you not wash your hands after this step?

    Sorry for nitpicking, but to me, that's a bridge. :o

    No problems at all. Sometimes we all forget to mention stuff we consider so obvious as not needing mentioning... and a post like yours reminds us that it isn't obvious to people who haven't been trained in this sort of thing.

    You're absolutely correct and I will amend the post accordingly.

    I have about 500 pairs of disposable vinyl, powder-free gloves but because I thought they were going to become difficult to replace in a worst case scenario what I actually use are 2 Ply C Fold Hand Towels.

    I got about 5,000 pieces of the above back in late February/early March and treat them as single use - Pick up a towel in my hand and then handle anything I'm putting in the UV light steriliser with that towel. Once i've put what I want to sterilise in that batch in I throw the paper towel into a dedicated "dirty bin" I have beside the sterilisation area. I don't have to wash my hands then because I never touched the strap and each C fold towel costs less than a cent so that's fine.

    I throw the contents of that bin out every weekend, wearing gloves for that purpose as I assume the bin is riddled. I don't touch the bin apart from that for the rest of the week.


  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 51,688 Mod ✭✭✭✭Stheno


    What is your view on the increasing number of reports that there appear to be a significant minority of people who have tested positive but were asymptomatic? Some of them came from Italy, and Iceland, another out today found that 40 of 60 Italians who donated blood and said they'd not had Covid were found to have antibodies in their blood

    Secondly do you have any insight into when an antibody test that is reliable will be available and if available do you think it should be made widely available to identify the true rate of infection in society?

    Thanks


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,801 ✭✭✭Roanmore


    Hi,

    My wife is a chronic pain sufferer and approx every 4 to 5 months she gets a procedure in a private hospital that alleviates this pain to a certain extent.
    She was due to have this procedure done last Thursday but 3 days beforehand the government announced the public / private hospital deal and the next day the procedure was cancelled.
    We are being told that it could now take up to 3 months before she can have the procedure. They are unsure what is going to happen.
    She is in awful pain as she can’t take any opioid based painkillers due to them messing up her system and this procedure is critical to her.

    Do you think Procedures like this may get the go ahead any time soon? It’s a day procedure, over and released in about 4 hours.
    I understand the seriousness of this virus but the pain is only going to get worse and the lack of information is adding to the Whole situation.
    Are the HSA / Government looking at situations like these?

    Thanks for taking the time to answer people’s questions / concerns.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,306 ✭✭✭✭Drumpot


    Thanks again for answering all questions.

    I don’t understand why people are suggesting you are scaring anybody, some people really can’t face the truth. For what it’s worth I find the blunt honesty of your responses so refreshing. I also find, as an anxious person in general, that trusting what I read and understand about what’s going on is more important then being told a fairytale about how everything will be fine. I find your posts comforting and they actually relax me... So thank you again for your honesty, I for one have read every word you have posted here and have taken steps to follow your guidelines.

    There are some suggestions that treating this like a pneumonia can be dangerous. That using ventilators can damage the lungs because it’s the oxygen levels that are an issue. I watched one doctors YouTube clip there say that he has patients that he thinks are starved of oxygen as if they are on top of a mountain without acclimatising to the height. I thought that was hypoxia but he didn’t use that word. Are you finding it that this may not be the kind of disease you thought? This doctor seemed to be implying every hospital was gearing up to treat this as a pneumonia but it’s not that?! Does this also explain why there are so many people in ICU with no underlying medical conditions in some hospitals or is there a chance that different countries are being hit with different strains of virus? (There were suggestions that the original strain was most potent).

    Is it a case that this virus can attack in multiple ways depending on the person/strain? Is it also the case that it might also effect a person differently based on an underlying medical condition? Would this explain why smokers are not necessarily showing up as a big risk because it doesn’t necessarily attack the lungs but affects oxygen getting into the body? (Perhaps my layman understanding is off there).

    Lastly , I bought a blood presssure monitor and oximeter to go with our digital thermometer (also got them for my mum and parents in laws). Would the oximeter in particularly help diagnose the lower oxygen levels quicker ? That is, if you were monitoring them for days and were phoning up your doctor , would this be a potential early warning tool for him to know you were deteriorating? It seems some people deteriorate quickly after looking like they were improving.

    I’ve been also monitoring myself and my wife’s BLood pressure and temperatures daily. Would having these stats (along with oximeter) potentially lead to us getting medical treatment quicker because it can give a doctor or healthcare person a better idea of where we are at internally and how this has been progressing daily? (As opppsed to just phoning up a Gp and saying “I feel awful” but having no readings).

    Lastly I had a temp (as did my wife) of 39oC a few weeks ago but not for long only day or two. Would it be too optimistic to think that could of been our COViD bout ? We had been battling coughs for weeks so can’t say if the cough with temp was cough that we had been battling before.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 954 ✭✭✭mountai


    What is your opinion of the latest HSE contract foisted on Doctors working in the Private sector , whereby , they MUST place their patients into the Public system , thus taking control for their ongoing treatment protocol out of their hands ? . how can this be justified when Drs who are seeing private patients in public hospitals ( which is allowed under their contract) can carry on as before ??.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,020 ✭✭✭✭anewme


    How do I endure my parent in a nursing home is not discriminated against re treatment.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,193 ✭✭✭✭Cyrus


    begbysback wrote: »
    I agree, the tone from the very outset has been condescending, the forecast of death rate exaggerated with no specific reasoning, the request that the public are failing to take directions and need to do more, basically asking the public to get tested and if your positive then stay home and hope it doesn’t get too bad, and if it does get bad then all we can do is put you on a ventilator, if we have one which is unlikely given that they are in short supply.

    I apologize that I am a bit irate, but unless some of the answers start including some hope then I don’t see any point of continuing the AMA

    First off please dont take this as a criticism and i thank you and everyone working in health care for all you are doing for those touched by this virus (and the rest of our sick population)

    however i would tend agree with the quoted post, my question is do you not feel it is in incumbent on you to temper your responses somewhat. my worry is that peope will assume that a consultant will know whats going to happen, when the reality is you dont. You have an opinion and a certain amount of knowledge the rest of us dont but thats it.

    Any more than an accountant or economost can predict the future of the economy, they can have their opinion, but most of them will be wrong.

    The factual answers that relate to the here and now are very useful, your opinion on the future is informative but id worry that people are taking it as gospel.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,227 ✭✭✭✭JCX BXC


    What do you make of the commentary today that we may have passed the peak? Does the larger (but arguably expected) death rate recorded today under shadow this


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,550 ✭✭✭ShineOn7


    Hi, what's your thoughts on this Irish doctor's views?



    Baz Ashmawy and his follow up chat with Dr. Paddy Mallon after the first one was viewed in the hundreds of thousands


    Very cautious optimism?

    https://www.facebook.com/bashmawy/videos/634155507431183/


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 521 ✭✭✭Shaunoc


    Have you been keeping in touch with UK colleagues and how they are handling within NHS as compared to HSE?
    Any improvements and good collaboration with NI colleagues, sharing of resources or is that pie in the sky?
    Is our country (gov, health, public etc) doing us proud in these extreme circumstances in relation to other European countries?
    Some projections of UK deaths hitting nearly 3000 a day shortly are frightening.
    Do you foresee any longer term positives with speed, red tape cutting and inter dept and public/private cooperation shown from the last month or we go back to status quo in a few years?
    Thanks


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 793 ✭✭✭metricspaces


    The UV sterilizer you bought has the lamp in the lid if I understand correctly https://www.amazon.co.uk/Baby-Ultraviolet-Maintenance-Sterilisation-443853/dp/B07YB7V5QJ . You mention that use this on ready made meals and tins. How is this going to kill the virus on the bottom of the product you put into this sterilizer?

    The questions on https://www.amazon.co.uk/ask/questions/Tx2IFDOQ5QXXVHG/ref=ask_ql_ql_al_hza reference this point. If you lay items flat down, even though the interior surface is reflective, then you will not get UV light on the bottom of your item. You mention you put several tins in it, wouldn't the likelihood that the bottom of your tins don't get full exposure be quite high? So really how effective & reliable is this for sterilizing your shopping as compared to using a liquid disinfectant?

    Your rationale for going with the UV sterilizer was that disinfectant wipes will be difficult to replace and are a lot more hassle - compared to Milton applied undiluted with a j cloth I don't see how your rationale holds up. On the availability angle, Milton is not in short supply and neither are j cloths. One bottle and one packet of j cloths would last you months? Buy a few bottles and you're sorted for a year, at fraction the cost of UV sterilizer?

    Hassle wise, you'd have your shopping disinfected in a fraction of the time with Milton & a cloth as compared to the time a small UV sterilizer would take? You'd have it done in less than 10 minutes with Milton as compared to 6 hours you mention for the UV sterilizer approach. It sounds like the UV sterilizer is actually adding more hassle; you need to open it, put item in it, make sure it's angled correctly to ensure bottom of item gets exposed, close lid, click on button...multiplied by each item of shopping?

    The UV sterilizer you bought is reasonably small and it would not be possible to sanitize all your shopping with this, how do you sanitize items which are too big to fit into your UV sterilizer?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 793 ✭✭✭metricspaces


    You give lots of fantastic information and insight which is very interesting to read so please don't take this the wrong way.

    You mention a few times how you approach things in a logical manner. So when you provide a rationale for the UV sterilizer that does not seem to add up, it puzzles me. You could have easily bought enough Milton for a year or two and it's a less hassle approach as you can quickly wipe everything down; the mere fact you can get it over and done with in a few minutes as opposed to a few hours by definition is less hassle. This to me negates your rationale of wipes running out and it being more hassle to wipe everything.

    From another angle. I understand you are just documenting your approach. However, as you have greater knowledge and insight than many others on here it may come across to people that this is the most effective route to follow. The gold standard. That disinfectant wipes will run out and you'll be snookered if you don't have a UV sterilizer as there's no other effective option. This may lead a lot of nervous people to buy expensive UV sterilizers or even panic if they cannot acquire one.

    For the sake of balance. Would you deem wiping packaging with undiluted Milton using a throw away j cloth as effective as your approach with UV sterilizer? Or is there another approach you'd deem equally as effective as the UV sterilizer?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 793 ✭✭✭metricspaces


    There are many ways to disinfect something. The effectiveness of Milton would rely entirely on your technique and how long you left it after before touching it again - they suggest ten minutes lay time per item. I think that, just like masks, they’re a great idea but so few wear them properly that actually they’re largely ineffective for the public. My fear would be the same with the Milton plus J cloth solution. Fine idea but the technique would matter and I fear many wouldn’t do it properly.

    Thanks. Your advice on the wearing of face masks was very helpful, in particular the links to videos which educate on how to use them properly. Would you have similar advice or videos that you could share on the technique one should follow if using a liquid sanitizer like Milton to disinfect shopping?

    I think advice on the technique would be really helpful to a lot of people. For those who cannot afford or get access to a UV sanitizer, a bottle of Milton will be more affordable and available. Having some knowledge on the correct technique could help reduce someones exposure to the virus and potentially save their life.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 192 ✭✭Notsomindful


    Thanks for answering all the questions so far.

    I tested negative for covid 19. Had and still have a lot of symptoms.
    So I have a few questions.
    Could you have the virus and not test positive if it took a good while (2 weeks) to get tested?

    What are chances of a false negative result in test?

    Is it worth getting tested for antibodies to check if you did have it?

    Is there another strain going around that isnt tested for in the current test available?
    Or
    Is there another respiratory illness going around that is similar to covid 19?

    Thanks for even acknowledging my questions.


  • Registered Users Posts: 871 ✭✭✭voluntary


    Can a person with symptoms request to be tested avoiding the €60 GP fee?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,636 ✭✭✭feargale


    The 1965 power blackout in NYC and much of the East Coast reputedly resulted in an overload of the maternity hospitals nine months later. In a worst case scenario, given the lockdown, if the virus is still prevalent here around Christmas could we witness a similar scenario exacerbating already stretched resources?

    P.S. As a septuagenarian I assure you my concern is purely altruistic.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,717 ✭✭✭✭Geuze



    Also, those who are hospitalised as a result of this, are they going to be billed for their care in the hospital?

    Hosp care is tax-financed in Ireland, apart from two charges:

    100 for entry via ED

    80 pn / max 800 pa if you stay overnight

    The 80 pn fee is being waived for COVID patients.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,717 ✭✭✭✭Geuze


    xzanti wrote: »
    H
    I read somewhere that this virus actually uses a persons immune system against them.

    It is the immune system response that kills, i.e the cytokine storm.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,497 ✭✭✭auspicious


    If you've caught it and recovered, isn't there the chance you can still pick it up and spread it for a limited time?


  • Registered Users Posts: 71 ✭✭chka


    Today is a particularly bad day for Ireland having 33 new deaths due to coronavirus and 320 in total. If I compare the same day with my home country, Greece, we only had 1 today and 93 deaths in total. What confuses me is that Greece has virtually destroyed economy, the health system is in seriously bad shape after so many years of austerity: for example, if you have an accident, you need to bring your own bed sheets, gauze and toilet paper because hospitals have none. In addition, Greece has one of the oldest population (#5 in the world) and Ireland has one of the youngest. Finally, Greece has twice the population of Ireland, and not only that but it's also packed with Roma and migrands that have no respect of the lockdown or interest in hygiene. How do you explain that Ireland has more than 3 times the amount of deceased compared to Greece? Also, why we don't hear any medical research or ideas coming from Irish doctors when almost every day, I hear on the news of new, more successful treatment protocols and reports for huge amount of research happening inside Greece's medical system?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 521 ✭✭✭Shaunoc


    With such a huge pressure on PPE, what of used PPE can be reused now that was not before - after being sterilized


  • Registered Users Posts: 132 ✭✭Satturnfalls


    Ive read somewhere that the virus can be mostly found in the floor and that peoples shoes are a source of contamination. Would you advise a sort of foot bath for entering and leaving the house for messages? And if so what would be a good chemical(s)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,375 ✭✭✭padser


    I'm interested in your assessment of your own mortality rate if you get it and in particular whether its changed since you first posted about it.

    Originally, you gave yourself a 15% to 20% mortality rate if you caught the disease. I'm wondering if anything has changed your mind on that?

    Given that roughly half of our deaths come from nursing home patients that leaves us with something like a 1.5% mortality rate for the rest of the population from the reported cases.

    I assume this is grossly inflated due to
    - significant gaps in testing
    - testing concentrated on the most severe cases

    Given that, I imagine you are assessing yourself as being maybe almost 2 orders of magnitude more at risk than the general population excluding nursing home residents.

    Does your original assessment still hold?


  • Subscribers Posts: 693 ✭✭✭FlipperThePriest


    Thank you for all your efforts. You have been an invaluable source of information on here.

    I have some disposable gloves, but haven't yet used them as in my own situation, I don't feel confident wearing them with any positive effect on my routine. I have seen your linked video on how to remove them effectively etc. When I go out, I carry a small bottle of 70% sanitizer. It pokes out of the back pocket, so I don't even have to touch clothes to grab it. Some examples of when I use it... before entering a shop, before and after using a card machine, before putting stuff in a boot, before getting back into car. Then when I get home everything either gets left to disinfect naturally, or it gets wiped down with disinfectant before getting put away. Clothes off and into a wash.

    I absolutely will not touch my face when out and about. My thoughts are that gloves would complicate my situation, and potentially even aid the spread through infected surfaces as I wouldn't be sanitizing as much. Or should I wear gloves and continue to sanitize? I bought a few litres of isopropyl alcohol so there's no shortage of sanitizer for now.

    I could see the value in wearing a mask (although I don't have any proper masks), but I'm at odds with gloves. Is there a point at which we could start looking to purchase proper protective masks? I know there is probably a shortage so I wouldn't have been on the lookout online.

    Just to add... I didn't mention all the precautions I take and know they will never be perfect, but I do my best.


  • Registered Users Posts: 252 ✭✭ballsdeep69


    No question,

    Just wanted to thank you ðŸ™♥️


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 138 ✭✭locohobo


    Hey up Bud....
    Noticed you have'nt posted on the answers thread since 8/4/'20
    Hope you are ok..and its just that you are overworked...(you know what I mean eh!)
    Be safe out there......


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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,829 ✭✭✭Cork Boy 53


    With the death toll in the USA rising virtually every day what do you think the total mortality rate will be there if things continue as they are with no change in restrictions?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,274 ✭✭✭✭Purple Mountain


    Good to hear you sound rested today and positive.
    I just want to know.. Today we saw 40+ people die.
    I just can't get my head around why our death numbers are creeping up slowly every day when we have had huge restrictions on our movements for 2 weeks.
    What I mean is, I know the figures for new results are not in real time because of the backlog with test times etc but reported deaths are in real time.
    I would have thought that given how less human interaction there is especially in the last 2 weeks and even since schools and universities closed the death cases would be down?

    To thine own self be true



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 451 ✭✭makeandcreate


    Hi - a question regarding masks - having followed your posts for a while, I realise you are advocating best practise/personal ideal solution.
    Specifically regarding masks, I often had to wear one in the oncology out patients - no one advised us how to wear it, put it on etc - simply - in this room we wear a mask. For yourself, for others.
    Going forward as a society; does in your opinion - using a layere cotton face mask have any benefit to us? I am not looking at this as "face masks make us invincible" or that is prevents infection from Covid-19 but if it reduced droplet spread in all users by 30% even, is that not beneficial?
    And thanks for all the time, energy and sleepless nights you are putting in - there are not enough words to thank you.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,428 ✭✭✭ZX7R


    Hello pseudonym 121.

    For example your child is special needs and you needed to fly.
    If the child was unable to wear a mask how would you see them been able to travel if a repatriation flight was needed for them and the family.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 2,980 ✭✭✭s1ippy


    Our neighbours along the road all have this virus, nine other houses. As they spend a lot of time out their back gardens, we are keeping our cat inside because we're worried he'll bring coronavirus into our house.

    For context he is very upset, I'm worried it'll give him bowel troubles as he only really goes out to poop and doesn't do any socialising with people or other cats etc. He's pooping at his regular times in the litter box but only after about an hour of wailing at the door.

    Are we being overly cautious? I feel cruel. There is only evidence of three pets and those lions having the weak positive but when we're so cautious it would be a shame for all our efforts to be subverted because our cat wants to take A dump somewhere exotic.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,339 ✭✭✭volchitsa


    Hi Pseudonym121

    Glad to see you're still doing okay. I have two (more) questions:

    I heard on the BBC about a woman who had been saved beyond expectations - her family had been called in because she was dying, but after discussion and as a last resort they agreed to try a technique called "proning" which is basically just putting her on her stomach (still on the ventilator obv). It seems just putting her on her stomach was likely to kill her, so it wasn't something they intended to try without the family's express request.

    Now I missed if this was because just moving her could kill her or whether it was something else to do with being left in that position, but I wanted to know what you thought about this - and also how quickly "new" information like this is transmitted to other medical teams around the world?

    Do you all wait until proper studies have been run before adopting new procedures, or do you tend to try these things out if, say, a mate in a London hospital tells you that his team has been having success with it?

    Reem Alsalem UNSR Violence Against Women and Girls: "Very concerned about statements by the IOC at Paris2024 (M)ultiple international treaties and national constitutions specifically refer to women & their fundamental rights, so the world (understands) what women -and men- are. (H)ow can one assess fairness and justice if we do not know who we are being fair and just to?"



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,695 ✭✭✭Lisha


    Hello OP,

    Thanks for doing this I find it very interesting and informative .

    I’ve tested positive for Covid19.

    I had high temps for 16days, then I did 5 days post fever before I came out of isolation. (Difficult enough with 10&12year old children.) neither husband nor children have shown symptoms. So I’m hoping that’s it. Gp told husband not to work since I showed symptoms and he didn’t do we hopeful we didn’t spread it. But who knows. I’ve no idea where I picked it up..

    When can I be considered no longer infectious...? Work are slow about bringing me back, would prefer if I was tested again and negative. But I know that’s not possible here..

    Date I first showed symptoms was 21st March.


  • Registered Users Posts: 541 ✭✭✭rdwight


    No question. Have been reading the thread,found it very interesting and acted on your advice where possible.

    Thanks for the work you're doing in the day job and here.


  • Registered Users Posts: 75 ✭✭GaryByrne


    Hi I have a fairly difficult question to answer

    My grandmother who is 93 is in a hse community hospital. There are more than a few confirmed cases within the hospital including 7 staff in isolation.

    We get updates daily from the hospital and my Granny has a mobile and rings us upto 5 times a day asking when she can see us as she isn't sick but just needs constant care because of her age and frailty.

    Last night her next door neighbour (from her street) passed away, in the same hospital from complications due to coronavirus, we can't even tell her of this as it would break her heart and she has nobody to comfort her.

    My question is, with the word that restrictions will be eased gradually and people will be let back to work without a vaccine, this will obviously raises the risk of my Granny getting infected through staff coming in contact with her. Would we be better to take her out while she is fit and healthy now rather than leave her to eventually get infected as most probably will if it is to continue to go the way it is going.

    I don't want to not see my grandmother for another year or at all as her neighbours relatives are now going through

    Our local doctor said she is in the best possible place but it is so hard to actually believe that at the minute

    And thank you for doing so much


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,139 ✭✭✭What Username Guidelines


    Any thoughts, or experience, on this?

    https://www.today.com/today/amp/tdna178991#click=https://t.co/3vlCF2fWgn

    Noticed by doctors treating covid patients in Spain, Italy, and US, along with dermatologists noting a spike in cases/reports.

    My 4yo daughter developed a slight cough a week to ten days after schools closed. We thought it odd as she was cocooned with us (she’s a transplant recipient) but it was mild and only here and there through the day. Only just stopped in the last few days.

    Middle to end of March I developed the exact symptoms shown in above article. All toes quite sensitive, swollen, itchy and felt “hot”. Similar to a fungal infection but on all toes equally and daktacort did nothing for it. Went away by itself after a about a week, pain went first, then swelling, skin still a little red but all fine now.

    Are you noticing any similar symptoms or a pattern of patients displaying non-classical symptoms alongside the usual fever/breathlessness/etc?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,274 ✭✭✭✭Purple Mountain


    I just have 2 more questions for you.

    Are you aware of what Dr Phil (doctor of psychology in the US) said about reopening the economy?
    Basically he says look at the figures for people who die in swimming pool accidents etc and the economy still goes on. He can't see the justification of an economic shutdowns.
    How do you argue with his mentality?

    Also, there's hints in the media, even from our leaders, that schools may return for one day a week.
    But yet, I've heard that there are still some test centres or the proposed UL field hospital that hasn't even opened yet.
    I just don't understand how we're near opening schools if that's the case.

    Thanks.

    To thine own self be true



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,511 ✭✭✭Purgative


    Well Dr Phil says what his network wants him to say. He's not a medical doctor, and neither does he hold a licence to practice psychology.

    ......

    No. We're better than that.
    Good post Doc. Not to say your others haven't been just these American Quacks really grind my gears.

    No. We're better than that.
    I think so too and I'd sooner be here facing this than any other country - Oh, and I'm an immigrant here ;)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 138 ✭✭locohobo


    Hello again...
    Just like to get you're take on the migrant farm workers coming into the country to harvest crops..
    I think that though it does pose a slight risk, (as we are told they have undergone medical checks in their home country and again on arrival. They will be isolated for the recommended 14days and will again be medically checked before being allowed to break isolation) that it is necessary otherwise the crops will go to waste leading to empty shelves, and as you say we're in this for the long haul so the probability of "familiar/local" varieties of food shortage could happen.
    There is a lot of hype been kicked up on social media about this but when Keelings advertised for local workers they only got about 40/50 replies, it just has not sunk into peoples heads that there could be food shortages if this plays out longer than expected or that there could/would be a 2nd wave of infection. Also taking into account that the €350 P.W. covid payments the government are paying will also put people off any thought of helping out in the harvesting what with the attitude of why should I go harvesting at 4am for what I'm now getting paid to stay at home...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,801 ✭✭✭Roanmore


    I just have 2 more questions for you.

    Are you aware of what Dr Phil (doctor of psychology in the US) said about reopening the economy?
    Basically he says look at the figures for people who die in swimming pool accidents etc and the economy still goes on. He can't see the justification of an economic shutdowns.
    How do you argue with his mentality?

    Also, there's hints in the media, even from our leaders, that schools may return for one day a week.
    But yet, I've heard that there are still some test centres or the proposed UL field hospital that hasn't even opened yet.
    I just don't understand how we're near opening schools if that's the case.

    Thanks.

    Totally debunked.


  • Subscribers Posts: 693 ✭✭✭FlipperThePriest



    Over the next few days I'll be editing the mask/PPE post with some additional tips and links to cheap gear on Amazon which will help make masks much more effective.

    I would strongly urge everyone who has seen the videos of how to put a mask on and take a mask off and so will benefit from wearing one to go out and buy one - even if it'll take a month or two to get here. Yes, do gloves and hand sanitiser etc also if you wish when out but there's a reason why the only piece of PPE I think is essential when out is an airtight mask. All of the rest is nice but can be compensated for by awareness and good routine on entering and leaving your house/work. But without a mask you are at the mercy of whoever passed through space you are now passing through over the last hour or so. If they were sick and coughed you are defenceless without a mask.

    Any chance of a link to buy masks or are you still working on this? I've seen some for sale on Amazon, but I'm not sure on the quality and wouldn't be relying on reviews on there.

    I have one at home that fits nicely, bought it in Woodies a year ago for spraying weeds... cost about 10eu... ffp2 according to the stamp on the side, Can I assume that this is the same effectiveness as a normal n95?

    Would like to source a few more online all the same.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 62 ✭✭Conelan


    Hi and thanks for your time,
    I know a vaccine will be the longer term hope as a solution to this virus but could I just ask your opinion on the anti viral drugs being used/ being trialed at the moment? Is there any pattern of success emerging with one over another?? Hydroxychloroquine is getting alot of the media attention, less so Remdesivir. Are Irish hospitals using these or do you think is there anything out there that can help? I saw an Australian lab managed to kill the virus "in vitro" with Ivermectin. Is there a big difference in terms of success rate moving from "in vitro" into the human body??
    Thanks.


  • Registered Users Posts: 871 ✭✭✭voluntary


    The Polish embassy in Dublin just announced the presidential election to take place in Dublin on May 10th. A personal vote in the Dublin 4 embassy itself. Tens of thousands of Polish living in Ireland. Will this be let run?


  • Subscribers Posts: 693 ✭✭✭FlipperThePriest


    zippy84 wrote: »
    Any chance of a link to buy masks or are you still working on this? I've seen some for sale on Amazon, but I'm not sure on the quality and wouldn't be relying on reviews on there.

    I have one at home that fits nicely, bought it in Woodies a year ago for spraying weeds... cost about 10eu... ffp2 according to the stamp on the side, Can I assume that this is the same effectiveness as a normal n95?

    Would like to source a few more online all the same.

    One more question, thank you again for all your information and dedication.

    How can we advise family about the perils of becoming lax going forward or is there any idea what the reasonable expectation for family contact over the next months?

    I and my siblings have young kids. We all get on very well and the kids have a great relationship with the grandparents, who are in their late 60s and thankfully, in good enough health. So far, everyone has been pretty strict keeping away. However, I've noticed little signs that this could slip. It's understandably very tough on the grandparents in particular. Our wee one has shed tears over missing them too. Of course this is infinitely more tolerable than the potential alternative.

    I recently went back to working from home. My mother, knowing that I've been cautious with isolation, has asked if I'd like her to look after the child, since we haven't been going out. I refused, saying it would go against all the expert advise, particularly since the child could be infectious and asymptomatic, but thanks anyway. There have been a few signs like this that lead me to believe that things might slip, i.e. other siblings may not be as cautious.

    Do you foresee a time-frame or any kind of guidance in relation to children with grandparents going forward? I am happy to keep things the way they are, but I fear in the future siblings may not stay the course, or my parents either.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,026 ✭✭✭JoChervil


    I have a question. I’d already created a thread on it but it's died with only few bulling responses. Before I start I would like to point out that I don’t live in Dark Ages, yet I respect tradition and wisdom inherited from our ancestors. And I am not afraid to ask “silly” questions because they sometimes lead to wise answers.

    Few days ago it was a video posted in the main thread made by a doctor from NY. In this video he suggested that in severe cases of COVID-19 there was an excessive amount of toxic Fe3+ iron ions in the blood plasma (he suggested that they were released from haemoglobin damaged by the virus in alveoli or at least I understood it in this way). If it was so, the remedy then should be the reduction of Fe3+ to Fe2+ and preferably removal of free iron ions from the blood.

    So my question is: has anyone anywhere tried to apply “cupping-glasses” in case of alleged pneumonia caused by COVID-19? I mean parallel use to a standard treatment, not instead of it. Simply experimentally. (BTW this method is also used in Chinese traditional medicine, so maybe people in China were helping themselves in this way while being sick at their homes? - so maybe it was already checked there outside of the main stream treatment?)

    I am not a physician but I suspect that BLACK SPOTS LEFT ON THE SKIN BY THE GLASS BUBBLES CONTAIN IRON (that is why they are black). And it happens only in case of very severe infections, otherwise spots are red or even pink (so they are not simple bruises). I know it from experience, that spots are not always black. What if “cupping-glasses” treatment is a method of "sucking off" a significant portion of toxic iron ions from the blood into the skin and thus reducing oxidative stress caused by toxic iron overload?

    Now in hospitals there are a lot of patients with toxic iron ions in their blood causing damage to their vital organs. It creates a great opportunity to scrutinise this method. I think many people would prefer to try it than let their closest ones die. What if it could help? Especially if such therapy may prove effective in severe cases where a liver is no longer able to keep up with the process of haemoglobin degradation and produces insufficient amount of ferritin and haptoglobin capable of capturing excess of free iron ions.

    As to “cupping-glasses” my mother used to say: "if spots are not black then there was no need for use of glass bubbles" (I suspect: there was no noticeable amount of free iron ions in the blood plasma) and also "the darker the spots are, the more severe and dangerous the disease is". This is due to centuries of human experience. I believe in therapeutic power of this method as the “cupping-glasses” helped my sister recover from severe pneumonia when she was a child. No antibiotics were used in her treatment and aftermath she looked like a huge pale ladybug with black dots on her chest and her back. Actually this hypothesis above is her idea.

    The “cupping glasses” are not acknowledged by modern medicine, but has anyone ever tested their effectiveness of eliminating free iron ions (Fe3+) from the blood? Maybe the extravasated blood contains also some virus proteins transferred simultaneously to the skin, which tissue gives probably the strongest immune response in the body. So even, if the spots were only simple bruises with no iron but some virus, they could prod our immune system.

    Why this kind of method can’t be tried and ruled out for good, if not working? Or approved and used, if working?

    It is only a question of applying cups (bubbles) and then analyzing the content of these spots. The advantage of the “cupping-glasses” method is that the therapy is very cheap. Much cheaper and safer than ventilators.

    I think it would be worth trying in face of such huge emotional and economical losses caused by this pandemic.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,497 ✭✭✭auspicious


    Thank-you for all your work and that of your colleagues.

    Going forward, should a conversation on diets which have strong scientific evidence of reducing the risk of developing comorbidities associated with Covid-19 be a priority to ease the burden of this disease on the healthcare system and increase the chances of ones ease of recovery?


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