Short thread on Covid and respiratory support.
There are numerous grifters, and serious academics, out there who seem to think if the fatality stats are not that bad, then Covid is no big deal.
But what's behind the numbers? Human suffering of course which can be alleviated by vaccines but which persists. Covid sceptics who live in their garden sheds plotting graphs don't get this.
So let's look at one aspect of Covid - the need for respiratory support. Many of the immunosuppressed who catch Covid will need this and there are quite a lot of us and we tend to have multiple morbidities.
At a basic level, respiratory support might just involve 2 or 3 litres per minute of oxygen through a nasal canula. It can be a pleasant experience.
When things get serious you need much higher flows (not flattering I know). Now o2 is gushing up your nose like a hurricane, your nose can bleed and you can get a very sore throat. Things are now getting uncomfortable as doctors say.
If your o2 Sat's are not holding you will need to move to CPAP. This can be challenging if you're claustrophobic because the mask is very very tight and the air is forced in under pressure. It really requires you to settle in to it. But not easy.
While on CPAP the bridge of your nose will get very sore and your mouth very dry but what can you do? I do two or three hours at a time. But there are occasions when I just want to rip it off.
Through these treatments you will be turned, washed and injected with drugs and all these minor activities send your o2 Sat's into decline and you can experience real moments of panic. Here you need to communicate with your nurse and make sure he/she moves at a pace that suits.
If none of that works, off you go to ICU for intubation where you will be sedated.
The grifters like @FatEmperor ignore all this. Not an ounce of empathy.
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1/n Assessment at 3rd level has changed enormously in the last 20 years. Advocates of changes to assessment at LC level should look really closely at what we've learned. Here are some issues:
Continuous assessment creates considerable stress and has to be managed very carefully. This requires a lot of coordination between subjects/modules.
The focus of student learning can become all about completing the next assessment rather than deepening understanding.
1/n Time to catch up on the dangerous nonsense that anti-scientist, Ivor Cummins, spreads on social media. Luckily the MSM ignore him, recognizing him for the crank he is
2/n Cummins believes the "virus is gonna virus" and there is nothing we can do about it. Social distancing does not work in his view.
3/n So this seems to mean that Ivor believes we're all walking around in a fog of virus. This does us no harm until the virus "triggers".
1/4 One reason that I worry about Tony Holohan having such control is that he reminds me of the many doctors I had in the past (not so common nowadays) who used to treat the disease and not the person.
2/4 If I had listened to their advice every time I was sick, I would never have a had a career in academia. My health might have been a bit better but I would not have been happier.
3/4 The phrase "as long as you have your health" is a grossly simplistic. You can have sub-optimal health and be perfectly happy, as I was and am.