Don't know where to start, i've stayed off here for a while as all it done was depress me.
A few notes (skim read tonight so might have missed loads more).
#Chiefdave
I've got a few ongoing health issues, hopefully, nothing major, but I'm at the point where I've looked into going private
as even pre-covid getting anything sorted was a nightmare.
Going private was pretty quickly ruled out when I saw the cost.
Tell me about it, I had to go private as the NHS only gave me pain killers to mask my pain (pain killers that made it worse as they masked the pain, so i continued to make the problem worse.
Once private i had an opp after 3 weeks (work insurance paid for it). NHS said nothing could be done and i rattled with all the tablets they had me taking. Ok, after several years i was back to square one and back in pain, but should the NHS not try to give you years pain free if they can. ?
It's why i moved out here when my job went, with the heat and less damp i'm in less pain.
PVA
No of course not, but Covid obviously has (or had) the potential to spread exponentially and overwhelm the hospitals
whereas cancer doesn't hold that same risk.
I lost my first fiancee to cancer, it is a long suffering disease for the person who has it and destroys the family and friends watching them go.
YES, at the start of Covid it had rightly been prioritized over cancer cases, but not now as the cases are so low.
Figures are showing only 2-5% had the vacination, most had turned it down.
WHY SHOULD A CANCER PATIENT DIE, because people refuse the vacination.