The epicentres of these cases appear to be linked to G7 activity (h/t @_johnbye)
Now, there will be both a lot more activity and a lot more testing due to the G7.
Setting up the venue causes activity and mixing which can spread Covid. Many people will have come from outside Cornwall to help with G7.
Cases started increasing before the G7 main event.
And Cornwall cases are rising much faster than in neighbouring Devon (cases tend to be rising around the country).
However, we have been told that the G7 was 'Covid secure'
Even though *events* may (or may not be) 'Covid secure' (whatever that means), ancilliary activity (travel to/from events, socialising before/after events) may not be.
The G7 has acted as an informal 'pilot event'.
How cases grow *after* the event will be interesting.
p.s. 1 - bbc.co.uk/news/uk-englan… - appears to indicate cases due to ancilliary activities *related to* G7
p.s. 2 - Half term. Neighbouring Devon would also attract half term holidaymakers. Hence the comparison above which shows a much smaller (though significant) increase
And, regardless of the mechanism of *how* cases have been imported into Cornwall, Devon & Cornwall have have the *lowest* cumulative case rates in England.
Cornwall has a *very high* % of people who have not been exposed to the virus.
The UK Covid Public Inquiry has published its first Report, on Resilience and Preparedness. It is the most urgent report, as we are still ill-prepared for the next pandemic.
🧵
This is the first of many reports, each reviewing a specific area, including healthcare systems; test, trace, and isolate; and the economic response to the pandemic.
The Module 1 Report sets out nine significant flaws from the Covid-19 pandemic:
"Inflation is currently 10%. If inflation halves, how much will a £1 pint of milk cost".
Sounds easy. It's not. It's ambiguous. It's not a good question. Unless it's designed to be a bad question. In which case it's a good question.
1. It talks about 'inflation'. But *what* inflation? At the moment, we have overall inflation at roughly 10% but inflation of food at roughly 20%. So is the overall inflation rate the same as the inflation rate for milk? It's not clear. Bad question.
First, the @ONS Covid Infection Survey is being paused, and @CovidGenomicsUK is being retired. This will have implications for data reliability and availability going forward.
OK, I'm going to write a response to this maths problem, published in @DailyMailUK, that has caused a lot of comment, some thinking the answer is 1 and some thinking the answer is 9.
Many of us would go straight to the answer 1. That's because we know (or our children know, and have taught us), that there is a 'rule' for how you deal with the order of doing the calculation - do you do + first or ÷, for example?
Enter BIDMAS (or BODMAS).
"It stands for Brackets, Indices [or Order], Division, Multiplication, Addition and Subtraction."
That's the conventional order. Forget about indices [or order] for now - that's not important for this one. bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topic…