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The Coronavirus Dis...
 

The Coronavirus Discussion Thread.

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It would be so easy for the government to say – ‘ok when this shit is over it all gets deleted’ but no, it’s being held on non-NHS servers for 100 years or more and with people with expertise in extracting useful electoral data from large datasets potentially having access to it.

That would be some fairly shockingly shit work on the contract. Could lead to the interesting prospect of post pandemic the UK government paying to use it's own data.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 7:01 pm
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Could lead to the interesting prospect of post pandemic the UK government paying to use it’s own data.

But why would they need to use it post-pandemic?


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 7:42 pm
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A useful reminder/summary of how we got to where we are… some are likely to forget, as the UK tries to focus on the “successes” of this government during this health emergency:

https://www.smh.com.au/world/europe/biggest-failure-in-a-generation-where-did-britain-go-wrong-20200428-p54o2d.html


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 7:56 pm
 kcr
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I’m sure that it’s possible to flag users who keeping spamming positives and exclude their updates.

A bad user only has to notify themselves as positive once.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 7:56 pm
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Yeah we can definitely trust Johnson & co with our data, it's not like they have previous....

https://www.buzzfeed.com/alexspence/boris-johnson-dominic-cummings-voter-data?ref=hpsplash


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 8:00 pm
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Yeah we can definitely trust Johnson & co with our data

And trust is the issue here. There may be nothing untoward at all but the fact that important points, such as data retention, the fact it's not really the NHS running the show, where the data will be stored etc has to be dragged out of the government rather than put on the tin so to speak makes people suspicious.

Why not just put it all out there and let people make an informed decision rather than have select committees and journalists drag it out bit by bit?

Is it because they think people won't trust them and therefore decide it's better to go light on the detail or is it because we can't trust them as they have ulterior motives? Either position isn't great.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 8:05 pm
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The Google/Apple recommended approach uses a decentralised architecture which is less risky from a privacy perspective, and avoids the technical problems of requiring users to have the app running all the time in the foreground on an unlocked phone.

More importantly the Apple/Google approach issues a new anonymised ID each day where as the UK approach assigns a single ID 'for life' which is tied back to at least the postcode you input at sign-up and the specific make/model of phone you use.

The A/G approach makes it much much harder to use the data for anything other than contact tracing / warning you if you've been near an infected person.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 8:12 pm
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which is tied back to at least the postcode you input at sign-up and the specific make/model of phone you use

I’ll put money on IP address being captured at sign-up and/or symptom/test submission as well. Unless they explicitly declare otherwise.

The A/G approach makes it much much harder to use the data for anything other than contact tracing / warning you if you’ve been near an infected person.

And that is why it isn’t being used. Or at least it is hard to avoid that suspicion. Why chose to go down a route that clearly will be less complete when it comes to the actual task in hand, hand shaking with nearby devices, other than to avoid the limits on data capture that the big two have put in place to try and encourage as many people to opt in as possible?


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 8:20 pm
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So to summarise. We should set aside all the worries that we have over supplying access to our data to the likes of Cummings and co 'because it's what's best for the good of the country'

Should the same discussion not be happening in committee rooms:-  'we should set aside our plans to get access to all this data despite all the things we could do with it in future, because now it's known that Cummings and co are involved people won't take it up. It's what's best for the country'

and to answer 'what data'?

I don't know, I'm not an expert - but as soon as Cummings is near it, even my inexpert senses start tingling. Convince me he has no ulterior motive, because it'll be the first time.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 8:33 pm
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I'll be installing the app as I hope that doing so is the lesser of the evils.

Hate (not a word I use lightly) the government and Cummings but they have us by the balls on this.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 8:58 pm
 Del
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Just in case no-one's noticed there's another thread for the app appeared. Should maybe take it over there and free this thread up?
https://singletrackworld.com/forum/topic/the-contact-tracing-app-accuracy/


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 9:06 pm
 irc
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So it isn't just Scottish Govt senior advisers who don't think it applies to them?

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/05/05/exclusive-government-scientist-neil-ferguson-resigns-breaking/


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 9:17 pm
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A prime example of 'Do as I say, not as I do'.
Just been reading about Ferguson's involvement in the modelling used to (very wrongly) predict death rates during foot & mouth in 2001.
That model was widely criticised at the time and by the Royal Society in the gov ordered inquiry.
That flawed modelling resulted in 7.7 million farm animals being slaughtered and did massive damage to the rural economy.
Doesn't mean that his/Imperial's models wrong this time.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 9:30 pm
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Probably got caught whilst trialing Doms app.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 9:31 pm
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Thanks for your posts, as always.

Surprisingly, at the regional level (and below this) thinks tend to look very uniform when you rebase to the same point (number of cumulative deaths is my rebase).

Does that mean that the regions where the lockdown occurred earlier in 'their' outbreak still hit the same max R number and the same number of deaths relative to their population? And also that population density seems to have made no difference?

If Regions in the Uk behave the same why don't countries in the world?

The variability in cumulative cases and cumulative deaths is actually small. That says that there is a common transmission path.

Thanks, what is meant by "common transmission path"? (I'm guessing the answer to this answers my third question.)


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 9:41 pm
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Just been reading about Ferguson’s involvement in the modelling used to (very wrongly) predict death rates during foot & mouth in 2001.
That model was widely criticised at the time and by the Royal Society in the gov ordered inquiry.
That flawed modelling resulted in 7.7 million farm animals being slaughtered and did massive damage to the rural economy.
Doesn’t mean that his/Imperial’s models wrong this time.

That's not really fair. They didn't know how long FaM was infectious for in 2001. Nobody did, years later on they found out:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-13299666

Doesn’t mean that his/Imperial’s models wrong this time.

All predictions are wrong, we just don't know which way they're wrong.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 9:53 pm
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All predictions are wrong, we just don’t know which way they’re wrong.

or, as I read recently, all models are wrong but some are useful


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 10:00 pm
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all models are wrong but some are useful

Excellent, I'll steal that one.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 10:07 pm
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Hate (not a word I use lightly) the government and Cummings but they have us by the balls on this.

No they don't. They can't compel us to use it and if sufficient numbers won't they will have to adopt something different and better - which apparently exists.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 10:09 pm
 kcr
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The only good thing you can say about Ferguson is that at least he fell on his sword straight away when he was caught. Beggars belief that he was behaving in a way that undermined the conclusions of his own research.

I did smile at the fact his "married lover" is called Ms Staats...


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 10:17 pm
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They can’t compel us to use it and if sufficient numbers won’t they will have to adopt something different and better – which apparently exists.

Or do as they have in Australia, and introduce laws on the use of the data to reassure people and increase adoption. If people refuse to use the app, they have to work out why and sort it.

Agree that it’s easier (and more effective) to just change the whole project to use the Gooogle&Appple approach at the last minute before going countrywide, like the Germans apparently have.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 10:22 pm
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Posted : 05/05/2020 10:25 pm
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oob - director of the Pirbright Institute for Animal Health said, at the time, that Imperial had produced 'some very seductive graphs' based on 'seriously inconsistent data'.
See current Private Eye, pg 17 'A Sage Fellow?'


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 10:28 pm
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at least he fell on his sword straight away when he was caught.

Is that good? His ICL report directly lead to the UK lockdown. If we think his report was pretty much helpful, why would we want him out of the game?

Same with Calderwood.

If we think these people are crap scientists, fine, but if we think they're capable they need to stay in role. Even better maybe the press need to stop following them around.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 10:33 pm
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oob – director of the Pirbright Institute for Animal Health said, at the time, that Imperial had produced ‘some very seductive graphs’ based on ‘seriously inconsistent data’.
See current Private Eye, pg 17 ‘A Sage Fellow?’

Fair enough, thanks for pointing that out.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 10:38 pm
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France going its own way as well:

https://9to5mac.com/2020/05/05/france-issues-misleading-statement/


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 10:39 pm
 kcr
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Is that good?

Yes, because leaving him in place would send the message that it's OK for some people to break the rules. There will be a whole lot of people out there tonight thinking, "well if he thought it was OK, then..."

Similar to Calderwood's case, either Ferguson doesn't really believe the conclusions of his own research, or he does believe it, but thinks it doesn't apply to him. Either way, it fatally undermines his credibility as an adviser in the current situation.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 10:53 pm
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I've not seen my gf for about 5 weeks. Cheers Neil.


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 11:13 pm
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Louise is contagious?

Did u mean this. https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.04.29.069054v1

Interesting May explain why there were less deaths in China than many expected to see

What would be worrying for them.is it this strain backwashes into china (so far it hasnt)

New , more contagious strain is shown in blue


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 11:29 pm
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UK death figures causing Johnson to go back into hiding, Raab talking rubbish as usual, whilst showing a graph comparing UK to different countries saying it's wrong to compare different countries

Testing numbers consistently below 100,000 -the 40k in the post ones having vanished , leaving us well below where we need to be to end lockdown

Hancock being a patronising tool in commons, when faced with tough but reasonable questions from an a&e doctor

Patel being clueless on why we didn't quarantine incoming flights

Dep science advisor saying we should have followed WHO /Singapore style advice advice, after all

Witty saying we should have tested more but didn't have capacity (which isn't true, the machines were always there in unis, research institutes & private labs & could be been used sooner)

Senior SAGE member being forced to quit for shagging around (& being exposed by Torygraph who have lionised Johnson's philandering)

Gove hell bent on not extending brexit transition above everything else, while there really is something far more serious to deal with.

It's hard not to be worried about how much worse the government seem determined to make this


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 11:43 pm
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Imagine having to resign from a position working for Boris Johnson because you’ve been shagging a married woman, I mean, how unlucky is that?


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 11:44 pm
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Little head ruling big head....


 
Posted : 05/05/2020 11:52 pm
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If Regions in the Uk behave the same why don’t countries in the world?

They are for the most part. That’s the surprising thing. It’s a common transmissibility. Prior to lockdown there was a very consistent doubling time for cases and deaths. The U.K. was on the wrong side of that distribution. But the distribution was fairly tight.

As for all models being wrong. That’s from George Box, a statistician if note. Models help inform policy. But conclusions should be robust to assumptions. The assumptions in the Imperial model produced a large burden on healthcare for a wide range of plausible assumptions. As did even the simplest back of envelope calculations this time around. Hence the lockdown.

As for my former colleague, I won’t comment. But my former boss was right to hilight that the mistakes fall in the testing arena. PHE will not come out of this well.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 12:07 am
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My sister is an OT. She put her hand up for supporting during the covid response. She's had some harrowing experiences over the past few weeks. Her account from a private care home that she had to visit last week was more horrific than anything I have seen reported on the news in the UK.

After being exposed herself, she's now isolating awaiting results of a test she had done today. We are keeping our fingers crossed...

There are some unsung heroes out there and she's one of them.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 1:00 am
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I have only been out 4 times in nearly 7 weeks now and even that was out driving my car to charge the car battery.

I have not eaten any eggs, bread or drink milk for nearly 4 weeks now.

Stay safe everyone. Hopefully this nasty will be over soon.

Not sure I will fly home to the far east this year due to risk ...


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 1:24 am
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If Regions in the Uk behave the same why don’t countries in the world?

They are for the most part. That’s the surprising thing. It’s a common transmissibility. Prior to lockdown there was a very consistent doubling time for cases and deaths. The U.K. was on the wrong side of that distribution. But the distribution was fairly tight.

Many thanks, that's clear.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 8:03 am
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Prior to lockdown there was a very consistent doubling time for cases and deaths. The U.K. was on the wrong side of that distribution

Can you expand on what you mean here?


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 8:20 am
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@kimbers

Cheers for posting that, I’d not seen anything on the spread of the two different strains for a while.

On the presumption that I have had it, and I’ve definitely had a chest infection that includes, coughing, fatigue, confusion*, temperature, metallic taste, toe rashes, localised aches/pains, sore throat, tight chest, and whatever stuff I’ve since forgotten about. It looks possible that I’ll have had the milder of the two. I first noticed symptoms beginning of late February/March, I want to say March 2nd but that might just have been a Packrafting trip I cancelled.

That would suggest infection mid to late February.

*arguably the most unsettling part


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 8:50 am
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So the new Blue strain - is that what we are really trying to avoid as a “second wave”?  Or are we still worrying about a second wave of the original strain and this comes on top?

Theres a lot of implications in the business. Press and media using the words “three weeks” to come out of furlough as if everything will suddenly spring back to normal.  Even my own bosses - the very top one being a Trump supporter so I’d debunk him - are spouting about customers being back to thier offices soon.  For a bunch of very intelligent people in high positions I can’t help wondering if it’s me...  but surely not.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 9:30 am
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Can you expand on what you mean here?

The coefficient of variation for doubling time was about 30%. From that I created 95% confidence intervals for this growth rate across all countries excluding The U.K. when I estimated U.K. doubling time, it was higher than the upper 95% confidence interval. Hence the rate of increase in the U.K. in early March was significantly higher than the rest of the world mean and we were an outlier.

The doubling time for deaths in the UK was 1.9 days. Globally it was 2.9.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 9:45 am
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Even my own bosses – the very top one being a Trump supporter so I’d debunk him – are spouting about customers being back to thier offices soon

We are deemed non-essential workers. I’m not lab-based. Our return plans most likely don’t feature going back into an office until about September. We won’t be racing back. And the digital change has been dramatic


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 9:48 am
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I still don’t really know if he should have stood down or not, my own knee jerk reaction is that he should, but anyway… an interesting take on it…

https://twitter.com/botanygeek/status/1257937836243853318?s=21

It does feel like an “easy” story for the Telegraph, when there are “hard” ones that need writing that would implicate their man at No 10.

He was still in the wrong though… can’t see how he could keep his role.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 9:55 am
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It does feel like an “easy” story for the Telegraph

Of course it is. I bet most of the right wing press couldn't believe their luck when this fell into their laps.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 10:04 am
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I still don’t really know if he should have stood down or not, my own knee jerk reaction is that he should, but anyway… an interesting take on it…

If I've got it right, he'd already had Covid-19 with a confirmatory test and had decided that he had a level of immunity, so while he may have committed a 'crime' against lockdown regs, in reality he wasn't going to catch or transmit the virus. Not a great look for sure, but I'd rather have competent people engaged in combatting the spread of this thing than sat on the sidelines because of a low/no risk encounter between consenting adults.

Also some classic double standards going on as ever. If this is a resignation offence then so too should Johnson's hand-shaking debacle be. And the rest.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 10:09 am
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