This is very far from normal. A shared decision to palliate rather than operate is based on many things amongst them the likelihood that the person will be able to survive the procedure and/or the subsequent period in ICU with any meaningful level of recovery.You do understand that this is normal, don’t you? On a daily basis, the decision to operate or palliate is often made purely on the availability of ICU space. The surgeon won’t be given the opportunity to operate if the ICU in charge won’t take them post-op.
What ?? Surely this cant be rightYou do understand that this is normal, don’t you? On a daily basis, the decision to operate or palliate is often made purely on the availability of ICU space. The surgeon won’t be given the opportunity to operate if the ICU in charge won’t take them post-op.
That’s the same woman who came from Quarantine in Melbourne I believe, and hope so as that’s a known one and isolating.Maleny in QLD has a confirmed case and town is very nervous.. It is all over the media... Many questions and not a lot of answers!!!
Agree completely with Princess Fiona. Haven’t quite made 20 plus years but getting there soon.This is very far from normal. A shared decision to palliate rather than operate is based on many things amongst them the likelihood that the person will be able to survive the procedure and/or the subsequent period in ICU with any meaningful level of recovery.
Please show me where decisions to palliate here in Australia are based on availability of ICU space/capacity.
I have never been involved in such a case in 20 plus years of critical care practice in a public hospital.
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That’s the same woman who came from Quarantine in Melbourne I believe, and hope so as that’s a known one and isolating.
I have never been involved in such a case in 20 plus years of critical care practice in a public hospital.
Which hospital is that. I’d like to keep well away from itThis is surprising. Not sure if you specialise in geriatrics or not, but this is extremely common.
Maleny in QLD has a confirmed case and town is very nervous.. It is all over the media... Many questions and not a lot of answers!!!
The original claim you made was patients are palliated because ICU beds are not available.I agree with Princes Fiona I have never palliated or have seen patients palliated because of a lack of ICU beds in my 51 years of practice.I have been involved in many discussions with patients and family along with Intensivists about why a particular patient is not suitable for ICU admission but in those cases there were beds available.This is surprising. Not sure if you specialise in geriatrics or not, but this is extremely common.
Wow! I had no idea that this is how it works. I obviously haven’t been concentrating. I thought everybody did a minimum of 14 days.
Absolutely not. There is no rationing of health care to elderly Australians based on critical care capacity.This is surprising. Not sure if you specialise in geriatrics or not, but this is extremely common.
In NSW Health you do 14 days minimum Hotel Quarantine regardless of testing positive or negative. The CDNA guidelines for community covid cases should not usurp the mandatory 14 day quarantine for International arrivals.Wow! I had no idea that this is how it works. I obviously haven’t been concentrating. I thought everybody did a minimum of 14 days.
So if you arrive with COVID you can potentially leave quarantine after 10 days but if you test positive on day 12 you do 15+ days. If you always test negative you do 14 days.
This should never be normal.You do understand that this is normal, don’t you? On a daily basis, the decision to operate or palliate is often made purely on the availability of ICU space. The surgeon won’t be given the opportunity to operate if the ICU in charge won’t take them post-op.
The original claim you made was patients are palliated because ICU beds are not available.I agree with Princes Fiona I have never palliated or have seen patients palliated because of a lack of ICU beds in my 51 years of practice.I have been involved in many discussions with patients and family along with Intensivists about why a particular patient is not suitable for ICU admission but in those cases there were beds available.
Absolutely not. There is no rationing of health care to elderly Australians based on critical care capacity.
It doesn’t happen.
So the lady in the question would have done 14 days had she arrived in Sydney but because she arrived in Melbourne different rules were applied. Is that correct? She came from the UK I think.In NSW Health you do 14 days minimum Hotel Quarantine regardless of testing positive or negative. The CDNA guidelines for community covid cases should not usurp the mandatory 14 day quarantine for International arrivals.
Wow! I had no idea that this is how it works. I obviously haven’t been concentrating. I thought everybody did a minimum of 14 days.
So if you arrive with COVID you can potentially leave quarantine after 10 days but if you test positive on day 12 you do 15+ days. If you always test negative you do 14 days.
So the lady in the question would have done 14 days had she arrived in Sydney but because she arrived in Melbourne different rules were applied. Is that correct? She came from the UK I think.
The only problem I see with masks it may give some a false confidence when entering a crowded room thinking "well I am wearing a mask" I will be fine. Instead of get me the hell out of here its to crowded for me.Mask wearing may reduce infection but the evidence is very weak.The strongest results from trials very rarely reach significance and often when things like social distancing and hand washing are taken into account there is often no difference.
More evidence if you wear the N95 mask all the time.
A summary of the evidence in one Medical journal.