Covid19: reactions, results & revelations

Like probably most of you, I have been finding life quite difficult since the "lockdown" started. Although I had seen them start in other countries on the news, I wasn't expecting to suddenly be told on a Monday evening that I couldn't go to work the next day. I had already been off work the week before as a precaution as I had a slight cough and felt low in energy, and although I was perfectly well on the Monday I had booked that day off as holiday, so I was looking forward to returning to the office and getting back into my work routine. But suddenly I was left trying to work from home on my laptop, trying to adapt to doing everything online when usually my tasks are predominantly paperwork based. The lack of time to prepare was one of the worst things about the situation.

Going out for a walk or to the shops became a more stressful event than usual. The shock of an eerily empty town centre, with so many shops that are usually open shut, the fear and confusion on other people's faces the first week or so, the worrying about not being able to get essential supplies, and the concern about people possibly getting angry if you accidentally got too close to them, or being told you couldn't buy something because it wasn't deemed "essential".

These practical issues have largely been resolved for me now. We (me & my partner) don't have a car and used to get a weekly shopping delivery, but now that's not possible we have managed to get a shopping bag on wheels so we don't have to carry everything, and we walk to Lidl twice a week which I'm starting to get used to. Nobody has shouted at us, in fact since the second week people have been more friendly and often smile or say "good morning". One day when I went to Superdrug I was informed they were only open for "essentials" - I panicked a bit as I wanted to buy hair cutting scissors and semi permanent dye to trim and colour my hair because I can't go to the hairdressers and I wasn't sure if this was " essential " or not, but they did let me buy it: which was good because now I'm not worrying about when I'll be able to go to the hairdressers again. Smile

I'm getting more used toworking from home, and I've now been able to arrange for paperwork to be emailed directly or scanned and emailed to me, rather than having it delivered & collected from my home or popping into the office to pick it up/drop it off myself. I realised that one of the things that was stressing me was the feeling that my home and work lives were sort of merging together, and that having work paperwork in my home was a big part of that. If I only use my own laptop and then close it down and put it away at the end of my work "shift" I find it easier to keep work separate in my mind.

Because I have a logical, enquiring mind I was also finding it hard to make sense of the information about the symptoms and mortality rates we were being told. I couldn't stop wondering how a virus that for some was milder than a cold, or even asymptomatic, for others was apparently deadly. It was classed as a respiratory disease, but smokers seemed to be suffering from it less than non smokers. It was reported that obese people and black and Asian people were at higher risk, but not why.

I have now seen reports that may answer these questions. An American doctor has put a video on the internet telling people that the he believes the virus does not cause pneumonia or acute respiratory disease, but causes oxygen deprivation like high altitude sickness. A New York Intensive Care Specialist has written a blog supporting these ideas and explaining that the virus attacks the red blood cells, which de-oxygenates the blood and causes hypoxia, and prevents oxygen getting to organs, eventually causing organ failure. They both believe that the medical community need to work together to change treatment, so hopefully the result will be that as they come to understand it better, it becomes a more easily treatable disease for those more vulnerable to it. Another report highlighted the importance of vitamin D in supporting the immune system, as viruses are killed off by a healthy immune system, sometimes before symptoms become apparent it would seem. It is believed that darker skinned and obese people, as well as the elderly, are more likely to be vitamin D deficient. Supplements are recommended for older people and young children, but getting sunlight on our skin allows our bodies to make it, so it's good that the UK rules have allowed us all to get out in the sunshine and with summer on the way we should all become more resistant to viruses in the next few months.

What are your reactions, results & revelations 're this situation?

  • And another thing.....    We normally have our gardens looked after by a company - they cut the grass & strimmer the edges every couple of weeks so it always looks nice.     They are not working because of the KungFlu so it's getting to be a bit of a jungle.      I borrowed a neighbour's mower this morning and have just cut it myself - for the first time in over 20 years.   Disappointed    I'm knackered!     I now remember why we get someone to do it. 

  • For most of my life I have been a social recluse and this is continuing unchanged.  However, there have been a lot of changes with other people's behaviour and coping with these changes is challenging. 

    Social distancing, this two metre social exclusion zone has become the new social norm.  Last week I was walking normally along a public footpath and a man with two children who was walking towards me really became upset and started shouting at me, because I came within two metres of them. 

    Postal services have become delayed and irregular,  this is causing my stress levels to rise.  On Saturday, my post arrived around 6pm. 

    Money, again my stress levels have gone through the roof.  I am on universal credit with a temporary discretionary housing payment (DHP) award.  Now, I am stressed out waiting to see how much the increase in my payment will be, both in the basic rate and the housing element.  how will this affect my DHP payment?  My DHP was underpaid last month,  was it cancelled?   I've  reapplied for a DHP in this financial year, will I get it? How will council staff sickness affect my application?   Worry worry worry!

    I'm afraid to travel by bus,  are buses hotbeds of infection?  Will the police stop and fine me for unnecessary travel?

    I still go for walks every day.

    I hate queuing in long queues outside supermarkets. Now I shop late in the evening when queues are gone, unfortunately many goods are gone by then and shops restock during the night.

  • I would always assume that anyone shouting about something as trivial as people not obeying the arbitrary rules in a supermarket would probably be a neuro-diverse person having an equally bad time of things.      I wouldn't take it personally, 

  • I'm not sure that the reasons for differences in mortality rates for different ethnic groups have been established yet,

    https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/11374162/do-it-for-big-mama-surgeon-general-tells-black-and-latino-communities-in-coronavirus-briefing/

    It's not a victimhood problem, it's a lifestyle and life-choices that put themselves into the high-risk groups.

  • I've found the lockdown a lot tougher than I was expecting to. In practical terms not a massive amount has changed. Before I was working from home a one or two days a week anyway, and my social life was none existent. I'd also spoken to my line manager about me moving to full home working shortly before the lockdown was announced anyway, as was worried about continuing travelling into work as in a higher risk group (I'm asthmatic).

    But everything feels so weird and different now, and I'm much more anxious about going outside. I was stressing out about food a lot as well, as some of the things I usually buy like rice and pasta were out of stock for most of the past month. And navigating supermarkets is a lot more complicated now that they've introduced one way systems, which I'm still getting used to and still not worked out what your meant to do if you forgot something that was in a previous aisle.

  • I think the neurodiverse population are being totally ignored, the guidance (to me atleast) feels vague and poorly worded. We're told to be reasonable and use common sense, but that's pretty subjective. I find it hard enough to understand instructions at the best of times but now I have this extra anxiety on top of everything I do.

     It feels like everybody is trying to catch eachother out and blame one another. People arent taking into account issues like substance abuse, self harm and other behaviours that could be easily triggered by isolation. I'm seeing authorities encourage us to report people for breaching the guidelines. Things can't be black and white, not everybody who appears to ignore the guidelines is doing so with the intent to harm others. I had somebody shout at me in a supermarket because I turned around (after leaving space for the person behind me) to grab something I'd forgotten a couple metres away. Now I'm afraid whenever I go shopping that I'm doing something wrong. It's true that lots of autistic people thrive in an introvert lifestyle or in isolation, but some people are at risk by being cut off from the outside world.

    According to the guidelines, you can help vulnerable people but this advice is geared towards the elderly and people with physical illnesses. Not that they aren't vulnerable, of course they are, but social and psychiactric disabilities don't seem to be considered.

  • Yeah, the way deaths are being defined as covid is a bit worrying. Up here in Scotland we're having 80% more people dying than usually at this time of year, with not all of the additional deaths being recorded as covid on the death certificate (link: NRS statistics). The figures for England and Wales are following a similar pattern as well

    I'm not sure that the reasons for differences in mortality rates for different ethnic groups have been established yet, and might not be down to lack of self-care. There's differences in types of jobs people do that might make some groups less likely to come in contact with the virus (e.g. office workers who find it easier to work from home are are more likely to be White on average). Poverty and over-crowded housing also has been linked to higher mortality rates, which are issues that effect some ethnic minority groups more.

  • As far as I am aware, the bug causes the lungs to become inflamed - this causes the respiration to become very much less efficient so the amount of oxygen getting into the blood is hugely reduced.      This will obviously affect people with damaged or diseased lungs first.      The heart will work a lot harder to pump more blood to get that reduced oxygen around the vital organs - so anyone with heart problems will be next on the list.      If you are grossly obese, your heart and lungs are having to supply the body mass of two or three people so they are the limit of capacity in the first place - the bug will push their system beyond its capability.      In the US particularly, the lifestyle of certain ethnic groups makes them hugely susceptible to diabetes and chronic obesity so they put themselves into a higher risk group through lack of self-care.

    There are serious questions about how the deaths are being defined as covid - apparently, nobody is dying of heart attacks, strokes or cancer right now - and influenza A normally takes thousands annually - but none at all this year.   Amazing!     Silver linings and all.  Smiley

    Anyone might think this is all about propping up the shale-oil dollar instead.  Smiley

    My life has barely changed because of the lockdown - once a hermit, always a hermit.    My parents are dead, my brother is the other end of the country, my uncles & cousins are hundreds of miles away.       

  • For me life has changed very little in the sense that I was unemployed before so other than being in the flat a bit more than I’d like, the routine hasn’t been hit too hard. For me the toughest part is not seeing  family in the flesh. I live alone so it has been really lonely.