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Dec 4 32 tweets 8 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
A quick thread on the history of reported positive covid tests in England, and the relationship to PCR testing. Image
What's going on in that graph...
The left hand axis tracks the blue line, reported positive covid tests.
The right hand axis tracks the orange line, pcr tests.
The bottom axis tracks time, from left to right. Image
The lines are a 'rolling 7 day average', so the spreadsheet adds up the totals from each of the previous seven days, and averages them out, to smooth out the high peaks and troughs of individual days.
Here's what pcr tests looks like without the rolling average: Image
Let's just zoom in briefly on the early days: Image
The relationship back in the early days between the number of tests being done, and the number of positives being returned started pretty constant... Image
But when restrictions kicked in, cases dropped, and testing increased dramatically... Image
That previous graph runs up to the start of term in Autumn 2020.
Testing in orange, cases in blue.
That's when the rest of the kids went back to school, and covid went nuts... Image
So during the 2020/2021 winter, the pattern of testing and positives tracks very closely.
More tests, more positives, fewer tests, fewer positives. Image
That relationship is chicken and egg.
If more people are sick, you test more, if the capacity is there.
But also if you improve capacity and test more people, you'll discover more positives.
But do you see how closely those patterns are linked? Image
But there's also a difference in pick up of positives during different points.
Look at these two peaks and the trough in between. Image
At this point it's worth reminding that the scales on the two lines are different.
That's why we have two axes for the two sets of data. Image
Without the different scales, the graph looks like this and is far harder to read: Image
But the relationship between the peaks of testing and positives are different at different points.
In January 21 you're getting about 12% of tests positive, and July 21 you're getting about 8% of tests positive. Image
And then at New Year 2022, you're getting 25% of tests coming back positive, and a huge number of them. Image
But during that whole period, while you get ebbs and flows of cases and tests, the general rising tide is more and more tests and more and more confirmed cases until... Image
A change in approach.
From here on out there was a constant attempt to reduce testing and reduce coverage.
Minimisation was literally the policy from here on. Image
And, yes, there's chicken and egg here.
As that horrific wave finished, cases did drop.
But testing dropped harder.
See how testing exceeded the previous waves, but now cases exceed testing?
(again, bearing in mind that those scales are different) Image
But now we hit the part of the pandemic that the minimisers love to point at. "look, it's over" they say, "because there aren't so many people testing positive".
But there's been a consistent restriction on testing from that point. Image
As Trump put it, you don't test and it goes away.
I've just heard of yet another person admitted to hospital while sick with Covid (admitted for a heart attack while ill) and the hospital haven't tested them.
It's a deliberate policy.
If you don't test, it goes away.
But it's still worth zooming in on this part to get a deeper understanding of what is going on. Image
But before we do, do you see how the nature of the relationship has changed?
Earlier the peaks tracked exactly. Chicken and Egg.
But later, do you see how the peaks of cases remain, and yet the testing line is less connected? Image
That's because they reduced testing on admission and in response to any sudden illness, and they narrowed symptoms based testing to a very narrow definition...
And so the definition of both sets of lines is lost. Image
But as we hit April 2023 and progress further in to the year... do you see how testing does not respond or correlate in any way to the increase in positives? Image
Testing is not completely disconnected from illness, as I have seen repeatedly throughout this year as people have been admitted to hospital for problems caused by Covid. Image
Heart attacks, bronchitis, pneumonia, dizziness, dehydration, fever, weakness, falls, breakages from falls - all **during Covid infections** but none of them tested for Covid. Image
Honestly, I don't even know who they're doing these PCR tests on anymore.
So when you get a minimiser pointing to this information and saying that cases are low, they are lying to you.
When they say that admissions for Covid are low, they're lying to you.
Testing volume is low, and testing has been disconnected from illness and admission, that's all.

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More from @1goodtern

Dec 5
Don't trust people who tell you to catch pathogenic infections.
Stop it.
They're trying to make you sick.
Read 6 tweets
Dec 4
At work today I got nagged by a colleague about my mask, my lifestyle choices, my not dining out, my understanding of the dangers of covid.

I'm extremely tired today and my reply was long and angry.
He knows nothing.
Nothing.
He knows absolutely nothing about what Covid does and how much of it is around.
Read 13 tweets
Dec 4
Well, that's a punch in the lungs.
🚨🔥Firefighters tested pre/post covid infection suffered significant 7.3% decline in peak VO2, the maximum rate at which they could absorb oxygen, with damage lasting months, and recovery taking nearly a year.
But...
frontiersin.org/articles/10.33…
... but the study excluded:
🚨firefighters hospitalised by Covid
🚨firefighters who stopped being firefighters because of damage from covid infections
And the 7.3% bit is average damage.
Imagine you have 3 people suffering, on average, 7.3% damage to max VO2, basically their peak fitness - but if two of them have only 1% decrease, then the other one has suffered 19.9%
Read 6 tweets
Dec 4
🚨🚨Yet again.🤬
60yo man here taken into hospital on Friday having had a heart attack while suffering 'flu-like infection'.
🚨🚨No covid test in hospital.
His son and daughter in law who were looking after him have both tested positive for Covid this morning.
They didn't test him for Covid, because he had been admitted for a heart attack.
The absolute pig-headed ignorant stupidity is driving me round the bend.
The NHS in England is in such deep institutional denial about the effects of Covid infections.
Read 6 tweets
Dec 2
Wow.
💩This is such spectacular bullshit.💩
Thank you to @skeuomorphology for pointing this out...
Someone in NHS England has pumped out this bullshit about "winter vomiting bug cases"... and they've misleadingly made it sound like Norovirus is the cause... but... guess what...
Norovirus: Winter vomiting bug cases far higher this year, warns NHS Norovirus is the most common infectious cause of vomiting and diarrhoea. The NHS says an average of 13 children were in hospital with the virus every day last week.
Norovirus cases are LOWER than the 5 year average.
And they were ridiculously low in 2020 and 2021.
Rotavirus? Down too.
Enterovirus? Down. The main messages of this report are:  Since week 44 of the 2023/2024 season, the number of norovirus laboratory reports has been increasing; however, during weeks 45 and 46, the total number of norovirus laboratory reports was 20% lower than the 5-season average for the same 2-week period. Rotavirus activity during weeks 45 and 46 was 19% lower than the 5-season average. Overall, the number of reported EV outbreaks has been increasing since week 43; however, the total number of EV outbreaks reported during weeks 45 and 46 remained lower than the 5-season average for the same 2-week period....
But do you know what is causing vomiting and diarrhoea right now?

🔥🔥🔥🔥COVID🔥🔥🔥🔥
Read 8 tweets
Dec 1
🚨🚨Bloody hell.
🔥🔥The hits just keep coming.
😮😮Reduced Grey Matter Thickness after Covid Infection - in a very crude nutshell: reduced brain processing power and...
(ht @adamhamdy)
jamanetwork.com/journals/jaman…
Gray Matter Thickness and Subcortical Nuclear Volume in Men After SARS-CoV-2 Omicron Infection
... and subcortical nuclear volume injury... well, that damage can do loads of stuff 😕
Harm to motor control, emotion regulation, and relaying of sensory information.
The good news is that they only found it in men.
Read 4 tweets

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