Sal Paradise wrote:
It is interesting - at my firm I have adapted to the changes - home working for those who can - distancing for those who need to come to the depot. I have upped the cleaning regime - changed break start times etc. In two weeks since we instigated this not one person has gone off sick and I have drivers delivering all over the place. It shows working can be conducted safely with a bit of thought - simply no need to crash the economy in the way they have - bonkers IMO.
What do Sweden know that we don't - I see for all their testing the numbers of deaths in Germany are on a significant upward curve.
As a private business surely you will have bought all the PPE and tests you need - you obviously saw this coming and took the obvious precautions?
As have we - but my business is front line care for vulnerable adults however, so I have no option but to send staff into the services they work in; and they're doing an amazing job - so far - of keeping things afloat. I currently have large numbers of support staff - mostly young people - voluntarily living in at the services they work at, so their colleagues can self-isolate and they are there to pick up every shift. It's inspiring stuff, but it will only take us so far. Meanwhile, care homes for older people are being decimated, with LA's and hospitals unable to assist and the residents being left to die in the home, infecting staff and other residents along the way.
What we do have however, is a massive shortage of PPE - we used up our rolling stock early doors, and the Govt helpline is sporadic at best; on Saturday I managed to get a job lot of protective suits from a builders merchant, and I have been assured that we'll have masks at every location by Weds this week. Meanwhile, one of our nurses has done a video showing staff how to disinfect face masks so they can be re-used - which is ok in a pinch, but far from ideal.
And no - of course I didn't by Covid-19 tests in advance; they didn't exist until recently, and are unavailable now to anyone apart from the NHS. I'd give my right arm for a couple of thousand of even antibody tests - that would at least allow us to know who has had it and is now safe to work, so that rotas can be managed more effectively.
So whatever platitudes someone wrote for the Queen to read out, it's certainly no help to us; and neither is clapping, or warm words from Govt ministers - we are doing this out of our own ingenuity and creativity, with no help at all from Matt Hancock, who appears to have entirely forgotten that his brief includes Social Care.