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Showing posts with the label Lockdown

Is society over-medicated?

In my previous blog entry , I described my experiences of the effect that certain medication - in that case, antidepressants - can have on someone’s judgement and character, and the effect on their relationships and even those around them. I also referred to an NHS report from 2016 that contained some startling facts, including: ‘ 48%, of adults had taken at least one prescribed medicine in the last week, and almost a quarter, 24%, had taken three or more’   ‘...commonly  used  prescribed  medicines were antihypertensives (by  15%  of  adults) and  lipid-lowering  medicines (14%);  followed  by  proton-pump  inhibitors  for reducing  acid  in the  stomach  (11%); analgesics and  non-steroidal anti-inflammatory  drugs (11%); and antidepressants  (10%)’ The idea that ten percent of the population could be taking something to cause them to behave in the way my ex wife did should shock...

'Health is more important than Finance'

  'Health is more important than Finance' How far does that apply? The UK, already suffering ‘lockdown by stealth’ after pronouncements by various media-appointed ‘experts’ on what is going to happen,  is now apparently on the verge of a ‘circuit breaker’ lockdown to ‘Save the NHS’. What about saving the economy? We are led to believe that everything must take second place to Public Health, no matter what the consequences - to the point where the government does not even undertake an impact assessment before bringing in a non-pharmaceutical intervention (NPI) recommended by a scientific advisor. But there are costs - we have seen them over the last couple of years; huge government borrowing (which we shall all be paying back over the next fifty years or so), a broken economy (inflation moving up - RPI now 7.1%, interest rates are going up too), society seems to be falling apart (for example - tragic deaths of children who missed the protection a normal education could provide...

Are the elderly and disabled to be referred to as 'crippled and useless', 'deformed', or 'idiots'?

The problem of innumeracy today  In some ways I was lucky. I may have had what today's generation might think to be a ghastly childhood, but I did get some opportunities that seem rare today. One is in education: the chance to learn mathematics and science from teachers who actually understood their subjects. The above may sound bitter, it may sound like a swipe at modern schools. Maybe it is, but I have helped two youngsters - one my own son, another the daughter of a friend - with their maths one thing they told me was that their teachers did not seem to know what they were talking about. (In my son's case, it was post-GCSE, at the start of A-level, when he was being taught the basics of calculus - differentiation and integration. He didn't get it. He asked the teacher to explain, who couldn't, at least not so that my son could understand. In fact, the teacher's stock answer to most queries seemed to be 'look it up on the internet'. (Maybe that invention, ...

Is lockdown really protecting the NHS?

 I don't know about you, but I think I've adjusted to lockdown. We're told the purpose of it is to 'protect the NHS' ... or maybe it is to 'defeat the virus'... no-one seems to be clear, those in charge don't seem to know what they're doing, but I've now got to the point where I'm getting through each day without any disappointment about things I'm not able to do. I'm not thinking of things I would be doing if it weren't for lockdown, or how they might benefit me. Neither, I suspect, do many people think of how much better off they might be if it weren't for lockdown - they are too frightened of 'the virus'. That lockdowns are damaging businesses and children's education is unquestionable. Lockdowns  may  help to ' protect the NHS ' or ' defeat the virus ', but, from my recent personal experience, I'm not sure. + + + Just over two years ago I had a gastroscopy - a not-terribly-pleasant experienc...