slparker wrote:So each time you take a risk in the bush it is now taking a risk with other people’s lives.

slparker wrote:So each time you take a risk in the bush it is now taking a risk with other people’s lives.
FacepalmWarin wrote:slparker wrote:So each time you take a risk in the bush it is now taking a risk with other people’s lives.
That risk only occurs if there is an accident, not a forgone conclusion. Accidents occur elsewhere too and those place the responders at some risk.
Weird. More likely an issue at the server end?Moondog55 wrote:north-north-west wrote:Have I offended someone or just entered some strange eddy in the space/time continuum? There are half a dozen threads I replied to this morning - including this one - but my comments are nowhere to be seen.
You have encountered an eddy in the space-time continuum and you are now doomed to repeating the last 3 weeks for eternity and beyond. Actually a couple of my own comments seem to have got lost also, perhaps a small packet loss in the eatherium
Warin wrote:slparker wrote:So each time you take a risk in the bush it is now taking a risk with other people’s lives.
That risk only occurs if there is an accident, not a forgone conclusion. Accidents occur elsewhere too and those place the responders at some risk.
slparker wrote:But, now first responders have the risk of attending a scene plus the risk of having a virus transmitted to them.
Warin wrote:slparker wrote:But, now first responders have the risk of attending a scene plus the risk of having a virus transmitted to them.
![]()
Always a risk to responders (not only first but also ER etc) to getting a virus from a patient, e.g. Hep C has no anti virus inoculation. This virus adds yet one more hazard.
Please observe physical distancing advice...north-north-west wrote:..
just entered some strange eddy...
We missed the opportunity to contain while the numbers are just a tiny trickle. There’s no political will nor in community due to ignorance. Now we will face big numbers and blow the system. For the 150+ untraceable cases just in NSW, there’ll be 5-10x hidden in the community. The only way to eradicate is to aggressively contact trace and mass test. They are still dragging and being reactive, and constantly trying to match with Singapore than China. Guess what, Singapore has just upgraded the response and closed all schools and businesses, their prior response didn’t have enough power against this nasty virus. Only China has effectively pushed the virus to near zero, running multiple days of no new cases. Now they are gunning for all the asymptomatic positive cases in society (significance in infectiousness remains unclear).ILUVSWTAS wrote:We're just buying time. Time for the makeshift hospitals to be built and time for the respirators to arrive. A mass outbreak is inevitable we just need the authorities to be as ready as they possibly can.
ILUVSWTAS wrote:We're just buying time. Time for the makeshift hospitals to be built and time for the respirators to arrive. A mass outbreak is inevitable we just need the authorities to be as ready as they possibly can.
ghosta wrote:Thats when the second wave, far worse than the one we are seeing now will begin.
Probably inevitable..
johnf wrote:I don't think the ordinary person can grasp the evaluation of risk for rare events.
At this point in time I would say the risk of being burnt alive cooped up in your home, far far exceeds the chances of spreading COVID-19 to a rescuer in a bushwalking situation.
At present with the level of testing and contact tracing that has been done, they chance of someone having COVID in Australia is probably less than 1 in 10000. The chance of needing rescue might be 1 in 100,000.
The chance of both happening would be less than 1 in a billion.
tom_brennan wrote:johnf wrote:I don't think the ordinary person can grasp the evaluation of risk for rare events.
At this point in time I would say the risk of being burnt alive cooped up in your home, far far exceeds the chances of spreading COVID-19 to a rescuer in a bushwalking situation.
At present with the level of testing and contact tracing that has been done, they chance of someone having COVID in Australia is probably less than 1 in 10000. The chance of needing rescue might be 1 in 100,000.
The chance of both happening would be less than 1 in a billion.
Not sure you're thinking about the maths in the right way. You might be able to use the logic above for yourself (or another specific person), but you need to multiply it out across the entire community.
The risk is not just about the person being rescued, it's the fact that you have to bring rescue teams together, potentially putting them in close proximity. And there won't just be one rescue, there'll be many. Blue Mountains Police Rescue alone attended 900 jobs last year. I'm sure many of these were minor, but you get the idea. These factors compound quickly.
Return to Bushwalking Discussion
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 55 guests