But your well-equipped state-funded hospitals haven't done much of a job with MRSA, have they?
Sure, they'll probably be more alert with a pandemic, but still, they're not magicians.
(, Thu 11 Jun 2009, 18:21, archived)
MRSA lives very happily on healthy people's skin, it's easily spread and resistant to various treatments.
It's very difficult to stop it getting around.
(, Thu 11 Jun 2009, 18:23, archived)
right after all the undercover news reports about people slacking off.
Either way, we have to put our trust in these people; but NHS Direct are telling people with flu-like symptoms to go to a+e.*
*Three people I know have been sent to A+E
(, Thu 11 Jun 2009, 18:28, archived)
but it turned out he didn't have it.
(, Thu 11 Jun 2009, 18:29, archived)
but between 3 and 7% of people have it and dont know
they then go out into the community and spread it about
It's not just a hospital problem
(MRSA that is)
(, Thu 11 Jun 2009, 18:31, archived)
All the positive tests for MRSA from things like doorhandles, windowsills etc came from his lab, and couldn't be replicated in real labs.
This isn't to say it's not a real issue, which does kill people and is dealt with seriously, but much of the media circus was based on a single phoney.
(, Thu 11 Jun 2009, 18:31, archived)
I was saying a similar argument with the report 11 years ago with autism being caused by mercury, and how (as far as I know, more might have been released) nobody could replicate this, and how the only girl who got compo was the girl with the mitochondrial disorder.
Got to love the media.
(, Thu 11 Jun 2009, 18:35, archived)
www.badscience.net/2005/11/how-many-microbiologists-does-it-take-to-change-a-tabloid-story/
(, Thu 11 Jun 2009, 18:43, archived)
(, Thu 11 Jun 2009, 18:23, archived)