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Saturday, 9 October 2021

Free Guy


Awesome!  I loved the film, though it did become a bit too Disney in parts but redeemed itself in a superb manner.  My wife watched it with my daughter, and while my son did not watch it with us, I do think that this is a film that he would appreciate.  

We watched it on our new TV so the picture was very clear.  I would imagine that this would be awesome to watch in 3D, but with COVID about, this is an experience that we have decided to pass on for now.

I would not consider this film to be a classic and I would probably watch it again if it was on television or with my son, but despite enjoying it, I doubt I will watch it again otherwise.  Ryan Reynolds is probably the best male actor for this and Jodie Cormer was fantastic in this.  I have to say that I am just amazed at the range of characters she plays.

Yes, the plot was partly predictable, but the solutions that were encountered were a surprise. I would have been happy to pay to watch this in the cinema, and it may be that that is the best place to watch it.

Wednesday, 6 October 2021

13 Reasons Why; There Are a Few Things I Haven't Told You


It has been a while since my son and I watched this.  And this was a very important episode when it comes to the issues of addressing the acceptance of misogyny.  Hopefully it will not be as long until we watch the next episode together.

Tuesday, 5 October 2021

Help with Jodie Comer

I loved this.  Loved maybe the wrong term to use considering the subject matter, but overall, it reflected a lot of what I saw.  Saying that, I did not see anyone from primary care wearing the full body suit as shown in the film and while our surgery tried to do things on a remote basis when possible, this was to reduce the risk of bringing infection into, or spreading infection around, the home.

Sadly, we know that the shortage of PPE did contribute to the premature deaths from COVID of those in care homesExercise Cygnus had raised this as an issue before, but the government did not act on this.



Just a reminder if there is any doubt about COVID. 
 1 - COVID kills. I have treated people who survived as well as too many who died. A nursing home I am involved in looking after took ages to become full again after COVID killed many of the residents there last year. I have seen nothing that killed so many so quickly before.
 2 - Face masks save lives. Not just by reducing the risk of spreading it if you have no symptoms, but as seen by those working in healthcare, myself included, face masks prevented many from catching this when treating those with COVID.
 3 - Funeral homes were overwhelmed over the wave of infections seen in the winter surge of infections earlier this year. I know as I had to visit a few. One had issues coping despite the increased capacity that they had built. Speaking to someone who works in a funeral home, they said that they had never been busier during the winter wave.
 4 - People with no symptoms can spread COVID. We saw that with the super spreader events held by President Trump last year.  We have seen other diseases spread through those with no symptoms, a famous example of the past being Typhoid Mary and we also see that today with HIV.
 5 - Just because Boris has dropped restrictions, this does not mean that we can act like we did in 2019. Our local hospital is under pressure again, though not let to the point like they were this winter when things were limited to life and death operations only.

Monday, 4 October 2021

In season


Leia has come into season now. It is expected as we knew it was coming, but it is frustrating as we have a few things planned, and she will not be able to go to the dog sitter as normal.  Which means I will have to find a way home tomorrow 


Sunday, 3 October 2021

Arsenal and frustration


How can a team that took Spurs apart with ease play so poorly against Brighton? I know that Tottenham let us play, while Brighton did the best they could to frustrate us, but there was a huge difference between the two games.

I hope that we play like we did last weekend more often, but my faith in our ability to do so is limited.

Wednesday, 29 September 2021

Keir Starmer At Lab21


Today, I took a break from work at lunch to listen to the speech from the leader of the Labour Party. 

It was one that the Conservatives would have loved.

The most memorable part of the speech was the heckling that took place.  I suspect that will cause as much damage to the chances of Labour being elected as the high profile resignation before.  After all, I do not remember much of what Theresa May said in 2017, but I do remember her being given her P45.

Saying that, Labour have forgotten that part of politics is advertising.  The brand of Labour was damaged due to the worldwide economic crash of 2008 which both the Conservatives and Momentum have blamed on New Labour.  But further damage to the brand occurred under Jeremy Corbyn.  I still stand by my view that the damage was caused, not just by a manifesto that appeared to be out of touch, but also occurred due to the actions of some who supported him, but ignored his call for Kinder Gentler Politics.  Under Tony Blair, easy to remember sound bites were used, Education, education, education being one.  The Conservatives understand this and in the last election, repeated the mantra of more police (but not enough to replace the way they defunded it), more staff for the NHS (despite increasing vacancy numbers) and the like.

Boris Johnson will come across as having a united party next week, and I doubt that he will many hecklers distracting from his message.

Tuesday, 28 September 2021

GP surgeries are open


“GPs must bring back face to face consultations with their patients. We need to get back to our workplaces.” Jacob Rees-Mogg said that in Parliament being unaware, along with our Prime Minister and Secretary of State for Health and Social Care that surgeries have been seeing patients face to face since the pandemic began.  

It is frustrating as before the pandemic, it would be common to be sitting next to someone in the doctors waiting room who had a viral respiratory tract infection.  Just before the first lockdown, many GP’s moved to a system of triage by telephone before seeing patients and this recommended by medical institutions. Patients continued to be seen, but what could be dealt with by telephone was dealt with by telephone.

In the surgery I work in, much more face to face activity is taking place, but people still slip through the net, coming into the surgery with symptoms of infections.  Staff are now vaccinated and social distancing takes place, putting them at far less risk compared to last year.  However there is a risk to them still, and more importantly to other patients.

With the waiting rooms kept quiet, the risks posed to other patients is reduced (at our surgery, we see suspected respiratory tract infections in our hot room).  If general practice is opened up to the levels seen before the pandemic, in the same manner, then more people will catch infections in the waiting rooms, and of those, some will be COVID19, and of those, some will die when they would not have if the triage system was in place,

Sadly, the Conservatives forget the pressure that Primary Care was under before the pandemic, let alone the increased pressures it faces now.  They did promise to recruit more GP's in 2015, and failed.

So when Jacob Rees-Mogg speaks about GP’s seeing patients on a face to face basis, he either is unaware that this never stopped, or that he wants waiting rooms full of ill patients infecting each other.