The following comment inspired the blogmaster to expand the focus on data collection and discussion about the COVID 19 pandemic. Thanks to @Lyall@Amit

Blogmaster


David; re. your 4:41 am post;

You are correct but I have indeed considered that cohort of the population.

The reason that the US experts are beating the drum for testing, testing and more testing is to get a handle on what proportion of the general public has been compromised by the virus in any way and has left its signatures in body fluids including blood in the population. The virus is shed from the infected body as the disease is brought under control. When it is controlled it has been found that it takes around 7 days for all particles to be shed from the body. Infected persons are released back into the community when they test negative twice over a period of 2 days.

Barbados, like all of our island neighbours, did or does not have access to large numbers of tests and had to use what we had very sparingly. Thus, the only measure that we had for gauging the incidence of the virus in the population (and a very imperfect one, at that) might be by comparing the evidence of infection levels hinted at by a comparison of the graphs of the progress of the various Covid-19 outbreaks in our Islands.

Most of the world was in the same position as the Caribbean and used the data obtained by the minimal testing of infected people and their contacts and their contacts to produce the graphs we see on such sites as WHO and Worldometer etc. All these graphs give an imperfect picture and significant underestimation of infection levels in the county or country in which the tests are carried out, but, since they are carried out in the same way in each country they might provide some rationale for guesstimating the comparative levels of the infection in various groups of countries.

The data shows that, starting out at essentially the same levels, there was some divergence in relation to the rate of infection and therefore progress of the various outbreaks in various countries. The graphs for Barbados showed low and declining levels of infection from the beginning, peaking at the level of 13 positive cases per day and thereafter showing a slowly declining trend. The individuals who would have contributed to the declining trend would have been primarily from the contact testing but should also have included other individuals referred by Health professionals or who presented themselves to Government institutions because of concern that their symptoms might point to untimely death due to the dread Covid-19.

Amit, in an earlier post on this blog, reported on his initiative of graphing Covid-19 incidence over weekly periods throughout the epidemic, in several Caribbean Islands. If David thinks it is appropriate and Amit agrees I can post a subset of graphs clipped from his data for 6 Caribbean territories which I think could illustrate some of what I have presented above.


Covid 19

There was 1 more positive case announced today as well as 1 death. A slight uptick of the daily cases line is indicated in the graph by the blue line. The total cumulative number of positive cases from the tests carried out yesterday is 76 – Llyall Small

COVID 19

Attached is the updated C-19 graph for 2020-04-23. There were no additional positive cases from yesterday’s tests and therefore cumulative positive cases remain at 76 – Lyall Small

covid10

covid12

Two new positive cases were identified from yesterday’s tests. There are now 5 cases of contacts with a previously identified individual. The 5 cases are workers from a Government Institution. Tests are ongoing today (25 April 2020)Lyall Small

Covid11

Updated graph for 26 April 2020. No new +ve cases were found. Cumulative count is still 79 – Lyall Small

covid13

There was one additional +ve case identified today (27 April 2020) from the last tranche of NAB workers moving the cumulative total cases to 80. The graph is still essentially trending downwards – Lyallsmall

Covid-Cumulative 1
Graphing Covid-19 incidence in several Caribbean Islands – Source data: caribbeansignal.com

3,454 responses to “COVID 19 UPDATES”

  1. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    @Hal
    A fee of $150US is only paid for the test if you choose private accommodations for your quarantine option and have the second testing done there instead of at a government facility.

    Anti-body testing is practically a waste of time as was proven when Sweden did serology testing surveys on their population and realised people they knew had it tested negative for antibodies. T-cell immunity testing will also have to be done and that is not easy.

    Some people, especially children and true asymptomatics have an innate immune system that is so aggressive that it kills the virus before the body needs to develop anti-bodies.

    Wearing a mask outside is stupid. Practically all transmission cases have been indoors. Outdoor transmission is practically impossible unless somebody that has it coughs directly into your face or something foolish like that..


  2. @CA
    “Practically all transmission cases have been indoors.”

    Please provide your source/reference. You often come here and state hard positions that are ridiculous and dangerous.

    @All
    a good read
    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/09/well/live/covid-coronavirus-testing.html


  3. TLSN
    Wuh kinda clown logic dah? South Korea banned UK tourists, Barbados has not….okay. What happened in both countries in terms of covid prior? Are Bajans being paid by the government to remain quiet when they test positive or are all dying and unable to tell their story?


  4. Just passing on info
    Nothing from my part of wishing or hoping bad for my country
    This is a crtical time with so many changes happening across the world accountabilty and transparency leads to truth with no holds barred

    https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10158200426788191&id=246784233190&sfnsn=mo


  5. (1) I was hoping for a scientific article with data
    (2) This is just an opinion piece. I could go out there and write an opposing opinion piece
    (3) It does not support the position as you stated.

    Excerpts from the opinion piece
    The odds should be higher in a confined area, where virus-laden particles will be circulating in the air. Following this reasoning, if there’s no significant risk of transmitting the virus in an unconfined space, you might not need a mask.

    Wind is one environmental influence that could potentially make an airborne virus travel further. If you believe wearing a mask is a good idea — even when nobody is nearby — it may be because you worry about being ‘downwind’ of someone who’s infected, yet out of sight, as air currents enable the virus to be spread over a wider range.
    Taken together, the science suggests that you probably don’t need a face mask when going outdoors.

    But that statement comes with an important caveat: your decision should also depend on whether you’re likely to be in close proximity to other people. If you’re walking through a rural area, a mask isn’t necessary, but you might consider wearing one if you’re in an urban park full of picnics and barbecues, where it’s harder to avoid contact with potential asymptomatic cases of Covid-19.

  6. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    Our COVID strategy went off the rails in May when our medical practitioners and government chose to selectively follow the science.

    We knew then the at risk demographic for COVID complications and what needed to be done to protect and treat them at the onset of symptoms but we chose to follow the rest of the world into economic doom by not being proactive and not treating people early.

    Mass testing and isolating the healthy and symptom-free is not the answer. People need to be told what symptoms to look for and what to do to avoid progressing to a serious case if you do develop the symptoms.

    We chose to join the rest of the world in this COVID pandemic madness.


  7. @ TLSN December 26, 2020 3:30 PM

    The blue Advocate should rather take care of the numerous crimes committed during the great economic terror from 2008 to 2018.

    If the DLP had had its way, Barbados would have sealed itself off from the outside world since March 2020. We would now have a major famine and 100% unemployment. Our situation would be worse than the poorest African countries.

    Incidentally, the Advocate lies as a propaganda tool of socialism: food prices are so high because the totally deluded and arrogant Barrow priced the Barbados dollar way too high. However, what should we expect from the founder of the DLP.

    How lucky we are to have Mia Mottley protecting us from the blue terror.

  8. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    @TheOgazerts December 26, 2020 7:13 PM
    Are in nursery school? Do I have to show you the article and tell you what to do with it too.

    Read the article and you will see there are links to the source studies they based their opinions on.

    I don’t put my life solely in the doctor and government hands like most bajans do and I do my own follow-up research on everything they tell me. Lost too many family members that blindly followed them.

    The information is out there on the internet for those willing to search, read, understand and reason for themselves instead of being a bunch of sheep.


  9. -/-
    I think we already did the 2/2.
    Have a great night.


  10. Ontario identifies first cases of COVID-19 U.K. variant in the province

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ontario-confirms-first-cases-covid19-uk-variant-1.5855361


  11. @David December 26, 2020 5:27 AM ” NO JAB FOR RASTAS. Community says it won’t be forced into taking Covid-19 vaccine
    By Colville Mounsey
    colvillemounsey@nationnews.com
    Any attempt to roll out widespread vaccinations for the deadly COVID-19 pandemic will be without the involvement of close to 7 000 members of the Rastafarian community.
    This position was made clear by spokesperson for the Ichirouganaim Council for the Advancement of Rastafari, Peter “Adonijah” Alleyne.
    In an interview with the Saturday Sun, he explained that while it was no secret that the Rastafarian community had been long opposed to vaccination of their children, it was their view that some of the COVID-19 vaccines were especially “evil”.”

    Dear David: Is the same Ado, whose brother, Sir George Alleyne was the longtime head of PAHO the organization which is leading the Covid response in the Americas?


  12. @Mariposa December 26, 2020 2:11 PM “Also name the Hotels where the asymptomatic people are house.”

    This information has been on the Government Information Service website for months. It is NOT a state secret. Had a close relative from the U.K who used the site to find a quarantine hotel. Stayed at the hotel for a few days than at own place for a month. Returned to the U.K more than a week ago. Enjoyed the Barbados stay, beach days, dining out, family gatherings. We had fun. Masks on except when eating and drinking. Windows always open, plenty of ventilation.


  13. @Hal Austin December 26, 2020 2:53 PM “the state is proving us with incomplete CoVid figures.”

    What evidence do you have that the state is providing us with incomplete CoVid figures?


  14. @TLSN December 26, 2020 4:10 PM “It seems bizzare that the local population appear immune to covid-19.”

    We KNOW that we are NOT immune, therefore we have been washing our hands frequently, wearing our masks,, and keeping our physical distance whenever possible.


  15. @Critical Analyzer December 26, 2020 4:42 PM. “Do we have anybody in isolation that is actually sick or just people testing positive without any symptoms?”

    According to worldometer 49 people are in isolation, and one of those people is seriously ill


  16. @Critical Analyzer December 26, 2020 6:21 PM “Wearing a mask outside is stupid. Practically all transmission cases have been indoors.”

    Define indoors.

    Does indoors mean the same in Barbados as in London at this time of year?

    I haven’t closed some of the windows in my home in more that 30 years. So is inside my home with more that a dozen windows open 24/7 the same as indoors in the great white north in winter?


  17. @Critical Analyzer December 26, 2020 7:21 PM “Our COVID strategy went off the rails in May when our medical practitioners and government chose to selectively follow the science. We knew then the at risk demographic for COVID complications and what needed to be done to protect and treat them at the onset of symptoms but we chose to follow the rest of the world into economic doom by not being proactive and not treating people early.”

    How did our covid strategy go off the rails in May, when we have had ZERO deaths since April?

    If we have not been protecting and treating at the onset of symptoms can you explain why we have had ZERO deaths since April?

    Your suggestion is that people treat themselves at home.

    Our government’s strategy is that people should be treated in the covid hospital by highly trained medical professionals who have access to PPE, medicines and ventilators and who have the training necessary to administer the medicines and to use the ventilators.

    how is your strategy of self treating at home better than the Barbados government’s?


  18. @Simple Simon

    Ado has a mind of his own.



  19. The young people everywhere seem not to care. This is Barbados.


  20. Cuh dear
    I will repeat to u what i told David when he tried giving the same answer
    Not everyone especially the elderly are technological savvy
    Many still rely on local media print for info
    Hence my call for local media to be diligent in providing govt info
    In a real world things which we expect to happen would happen
    Hence back up planning is necessary


  21. They are three female visitors aged 24, 44, and 68, and a 58-year-old male visitor. Three of them, who arrived on island between December 15 and 20, on West Jet and British Airways, tested positive on their second test. The 44-year-old came into contact with a known case. They are all asymptomatic…..(Quote)

    ?????? Are we being sold a pup, which out of a bogus patriotism we buy. We must learn to question everything and everyone. Is tourism now the determining factor in our health care?
    Is the Mottley government putting the health and lives of ordinary Barbadians at risk in order to shore-up the tourism sector and the economy?


  22. The bottom line is getting visitors to fill hotel rooms
    When all is said and done the medical cost as it continues to mount would be placed on the backs of the people under the guise of keeping the economy open

  23. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    @Cuhdear Bajan December 26, 2020 11:04 PM

    How did our covid strategy go off the rails in May, when we have had ZERO deaths since April?

    If we have not been protecting and treating at the onset of symptoms can you explain why we have had ZERO deaths since April?

    Your suggestion is that people treat themselves at home.

    Our government’s strategy is that people should be treated in the covid hospital by highly trained medical professionals who have access to PPE, medicines and ventilators and who have the training necessary to administer the medicines and to use the ventilators.

    how is your strategy of self treating at home better than the Barbados government’s?

    From May, a strategy similar to this is what we should have been following https://www.evms.edu/media/evms_public/departments/internal_medicine/Marik-Covid-Protocol-Summary.pdf . Since we are identifying people with COVID in the early stages, we would know by now if this strategy works or not. Isolating every single person whether they require hospital care or not is far too costly and diverting limited resources from other medical conditions people are dying from as well.

    People are still dying and being hospitalized as a result of the draconian COVID measures. They may not have had COVID but if the loss of their livelihood resulted in a suicide, stoke or heart attack that otherwise would not have happened is that not also an indirect COVID related death or hospitalization as well.

    This is why accurate statistics other than COVID deaths are so important. As a standard our government should be publicizing statistics on a monthly basis on
    1) The deaths broken down by cause
    2) Currently admitted hospitalized persons at the QEH by reason.
    I bet the government does not even collect this on a timely basis for their own purposes.

    Our people in power didn’t always have education but they all used to be able to do basic arithmetic and have common sense. Now it seems common sense and basic addition and subtraction skills have been replaced by useless pieces of paper called degrees serving no useful purpose.


  24. @ Critical

    Thank you. At least one person has got the message. I believe we are being sold a pup.


  25. The University of the West Indies (The UWI) is encouraging a responsible, positive and open-minded approach towards the COVID-19 vaccine.
    The message was brought forward at a Vice-Chancellor’s Forum aimed at exploring developments in the battle against the COVID-19 pandemic, with particular focus on the new vaccines. The virtual event was hosted recently and was led by The UWI COVID-19 Task Force….(Quote)

    Read the above, then read Francoise Verges study of how whit e French doctors induced abortions in black women in Reunion, all in a good cause, of course, in the 1970s.
    The remind yourself of the Tuskegee Experiment and the involvement of a nurse throughout the entirety f the programme; then look at the trials of the pill on black women in Puerto Rico; then read about how, long before HIV/Aids, British blood transfusion authorities used to take blood from black people and pour it away; or read about Dr Brittani James.
    We must always ask who will benefit most from any developments.


  26. CLEARED TO PLAY
    More sports given green light under Covid-19 protocols
    By Suzanne Prescod
    Barbados’ sports are finally coming out of the shadow of the COVID-19 pandemic.
    For most of 2020, competitive sports have been on hold islandwide, but that’s about to change, after the sport of weightlifting became the 19th sporting organisation to be given permission to return to the “field” by the COVID-19 Monitoring Unit.
    Neil Murrell, director of sports at the National Sports Council (NSC) has confirmed that the Barbados Amateur Weightlifting Association is the latest sport to be given approval to resume training following the COVID-19 lockdown.
    But it’s still back to the drawing board for some.
    Clearance
    In a wide-ranging interview with the
    Sunday Sun, Murrell indicated some sports have been given clearance, while others have been allowed to “play” but with restrictions to ensure the safety of the competitors and officials.
    “National sporting organisations can develop their own set of rules to be used during COVID-19, typically based on their international federation’s rules. These rules [should be] submitted to the National Sports Council (NSC), who will then forward the [proposal] to the COVID Monitoring Unit (CMU) for their review and comments. Permission is then granted or denied and this is confirmed to the sporting organisations by the NSC,” Murrell explained.
    The indigenous sport of road tennis, along with, cricket, dominoes, chess, table tennis, badminton, horse racing, skate boarding, hockey, volleyball, swimming and cycling have all been ratified to resume competition in their usual formats, providing they follow the required safety protocols.
    Boxing, track and field and motor sport were also sanctioned but with “provisions” to ensure everyone remains safe and contact is limited.
    “In particular circumstances, for example, in the case of a special event, like the National Association of Primary Schools Athletic Championships (NAPSAC) a proposal is delivered in person, on the specifics of the event to the CMU, at which time, the presenters [may be asked ] to expand on their proposal for further clarification,” Murrell added.
    The approval process varies according to the sport, or event, and the volume of prioritised work of the CMU.
    He noted that generally, approval takes three weeks. However, there have been cases where the time frame extended to a month or more.
    Murrell also said some of the approved sports may also need to comply with other added stipulations, which the CMU has determined is needed for a particular sport to be played competitively.
    “The CMU is very stringent with their rules, as they seek to ensure the required protocols are adhered to. Ensuring community spread does not occur, is at the forefront of their decisions. As such, for approval, the CMU [generally] requires a contactless sport, the following of the established COVID protocols (social distancing, temperature checks, contact tracing, hand washing) along with limited spectator participation,” Murrell said.
    “For contact sports, the CMU [may] grant approval for the participants to undertake drills/skills competitions [so the sport can continue along stated guidelines],” the director said.
    Some contact sports were denied permission, however, approval for drills and skills only, has been granted to basketball, football, judo and netball.
    “Obviously, we are disappointed, but we appreciate that the health and safety of our players, officials, spectators and members is paramount. We have re-submitted a revised proposal to the CMU and we are patiently awaiting a favourable response,” said president of the Barbados Amateur Basketball Association, Francis Williams.
    “The CMU has classified football as a contact sport, and thus it makes it very difficult to manage islandwide competitions. We accept that position, but we are hopeful that at some point, we can be given permission to resume our sport as usual,” president of the Barbados Football Association, Randy Harris noted.
    “We are particularly concerned about our national teams, as they have not been able to compete for over nine months. However, internationally, competitions are being scheduled to resume in March next year, and our players will be at a serious disadvantage against stronger opposition, if their training does not include competitive tournaments.”
    Sporting organisations, which were denied can reapply outlining specific revamped protocols which highlight how they would conform to CMU’s COVID-19 protocols.
    Additionally, they should continually monitor information produced by the CMU, to ascertain if there has been any relaxing of the restrictions.
    There is a close synergy between the NSC and the CMU to facilitate the safe recommencement of competitions.
    The NSC manages the administrative aspect, while the CMU controls the technical and medical concerns. Personnel from the CMU may also make periodic checks on tournaments, to ensure that sporting organisations are being compliant.
    “Sports will [continue to] be affected somewhat by the restrictions associated with COVID protocol, at least until a reliable vaccine is produced. Currently, there is much scepticism by the public at large. I believe by the latter half of 2021, some degree of normalcy will begin to take root,” noted Murrell.

    Source: NAtion


  27. More information needed
    By Tony Best
    A mixed picture of hope, relief and potential trouble may be on the horizon as global health experts and scientists hail the initial distribution of the coronavirus vaccines developed by Pfizer and Moderna and distributed in North America, Europe and elsewhere.
    This comes also as a new and virulent strain of the virus has emerged in the United Kingdom at a time when Barbados and its neighbours are preparing for the delivery in March of the approved COVID-19 vaccines and as a Bajan infectious disease expert in the United States keeps his scientific fingers crossed about potential “trouble” for countries everywhere, Barbados included.
    The “possible trouble could arise,” explained Dr Wayne Greaves, a distinguished scientist at a sprawling international drug development and manufacturing firm in New Jersey, if the new strain found in the South of England turned out to be resistant to the recently approved vaccines which have opened a large window of hope and relief that the virus which has so far killed almost two million people worldwide, 307 000 of whom were in the United States alone could be brought under control.
    New strain
    “We need more information on the new strain of the virus being reported in the UK but if it turns out that the new strain is not only more infectious, which we already know that it spreads more quickly but if it turns out to be more deadly than the current strain and if it also turns out that the vaccine would not work against the strain, we know today then we have a big problem,” Greaves told the Sunday Sun.
    “If it turns out that the vaccines would not protect people against the new strain then we could have a big, big problem. We don’t have the answer to that yet because it (new strain) has to be tested” and the results known, said Greaves.
    Several European countries are so worried about the new strain that they have cut off air transportation links with Britain. In addition, it has turned up in several mutations in England and has infected at least 1 000 people.
    Still, the global scientific community is taking a victory lap as more vaccines are being given daily to key government officials. US President-elect, Joseph Biden, and prominent international scientists were given the vaccines without suffering any major disruptive side-effects. They have taken the Pfizer vaccine in a public show of support to assure people that the vaccine’s protective medical shield was safe.
    “It is indeed safe and should be taken by people including Barbadians,” said Greaves. “Barbadians should have the confidence to take it.”
    Sir George Alleyne, a Bajan and the first Caribbean public health administrator to be elected Director of the Pan American Health Organization who later went on to serve as Chancellor of the University of the West Indies, agreed with Greaves.
    “Yes, absolutely, people in our region should take the vaccine,” he said.
    The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines were approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for emergency use to help curb the spread of the disease. The Pfizer vaccine was the first to get the FDA nod and last week the Moderna medication was approved. Both are being distributed across the US. “The availability of Moderna along with the Pfizer vaccine would be helpful to Barbados when both become available,” said Greaves, a former professor of medicine at Howard University School in Washington D.C. “The Moderna vaccine is essentially the same kind of vaccine as Pfizer. There is very little difference between the two. The most important difference from a logistical perspective is the fact that the Moderna vaccine doesn’t require the ultra-deep freeze storage that the Pfizer vaccine needs.
    Little difference
    “The Moderna vaccine needs to be given in two doses, four weeks apart while the Pfizer can be given in two doses, three weeks apart,” the Bajan scientists explained. “Beyond that, there is very little difference between them.”
    Greaves said a third vaccine which was being developed and is being tested by Johnson & Johnson was expected to become available to the public during the first quarter of next year. It may prove to be more popular among people seeking protection against the virus.
    “The Johnson & Johnson vaccine is a different kind of vaccine, what we call a vectorbased vaccine. The attractive thing of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine is that it only requires a single dose,” he explained.
    “That could be very attractive for people wanting to think of coming to a centre only once to receive it, not to have to come back in three or four weeks. It looks good and we expect the results of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine to be available in the first quarter of next year.
    “I think that if the efficacy looks good, I think there is going to be a lot of interest in using that vaccine,” said Greaves.
    “People would prefer to get one does of the vaccine instead of two,” Greaves said. “That could be a deciding factor for several people,” including Barbadians. “It also doesn’t require any deep freeze storage or anything like that. It would make it easier to distribute to many countries around the world,” Barbados among them.
    “There are several different types of vaccines being studied around the world. Sometimes we get a lot of information about them and sometimes we don’t and that makes it difficult sometimes to discuss the details about these vaccines,” he added.
    “It is indeed safe and should be taken by people including Barbadians,” said Greaves.
    “Barbadians should have the confidence to take it.”

    Source: Nation

  28. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    @Hal Austin
    We have been sold a bunch of pup since May for these reasons
    1) the medical professionals are afraid to admit they pushed the panic button too hard scaring the whole world over something some of their fellow doctors learnt how to effectively and cheaply treat by the end of April.
    2) the stupid politicians refused to challenge the medical professionals coming with the never before tried lockdown mentality started by China when they knew the China statistics were and still are fabricated
    3) the under-funding, suppression and sabotaging of studies and news on effective treatments strategies in favour of an untested vaccine no one knows the long term effects for so pharmaceutical companies and their investors can make huge profits without the liability risk.

    No one wants to admit mistakes were made and take their licks so we will continue to be sold a bunch of pup.


  29. The video is on fb where a lady states her name and her job profession as a nurse
    Said she took the vaccine and three days later one side of her face got twisted and she was diagnosed as having bells palsy
    Now she wants the people to know that a side effect like the one she has can occur


  30. So the video was removed because she spoke the truth about her condition ?
    When these steps are made to undermined truth questions of the asking as to who is telling the naked truth
    Removing the video in my mind speaks to those of a mentality who would rather hid the truth in order to control the message


  31. Steupse! I know of no-one who knows of anyone who has covid. Covid cannot hide in Barbados. I also prefer to listen to our Public Health officials than people with political agendas of the Trumpian and DLP kind and people who simply cannot accept that Barbadians can do better than Englishmen.

    Keep up the good work, Cuhdear Bajan! I am here happy as can be and COVID free. If that changes, we all will know. BAJANS HAVE BIG MOUTHS.

  32. Critical Analyzer Avatar

    @Donna
    Just because you or your friends ain’t hear the tree in the forest fall, does not mean the tree did not fall.

    Most people who have it will not even know as they will not get tested unless they are sick enough to require hospitalization or must get tested through some sort of contact tracing or having to get surgery since people scheduled for surgery get tested from what I understand.

    I personally think I had it back in February before it was really in the news and the lockdown started. There was this space of a few days where I woke up with this unusual fever and cough that had me down for 1-2 days. Then for about 2-3 weeks I felt a slight discomfort in my lungs when I took a deep breath. Don’t have asthma, never been sick with so much as a cold in years.

    It was back on my feet before I even thought it might have been COVID. I didn’t visit a doctor nor get tested either and I sure many other people had those experiences around that time too that may or may not have been covid but we will never know.

    People get sick all the time and for the most part get better on their own, the only ones worth taking note of are the serious cases, not every single minor case.


  33. @ Critical

    Last January a group of Chinese men came in at Grantley Adams and some were coughing and coughing until they were blue in the face. One man was so affected that he walked out of customs and sat on the grass near the exit just coughing.
    It was clear something was seriously wrong with all of them, but at that time we simply thought they had been drinking too much sauce and had simply over-indulged.
    It was not until March that the WHO declared that there was a pandemic and the world got to hear of CoVid and we were told it had been in China since that December.
    We all obviously wish that Barbados, or any other nation, does not suffer any more deaths from CoVid, but we cannot just stick our fingers in the air and hope for the best. More people survive CoVid than die from it.
    But some of us will like a more evidence-based public health policy, starting with a clear and comprehensible epidemiological model, based on sound probability and not guess work, backed with a protective strategy based on the probability of contagion.
    The real danger is playing politics with a pandemic that can cripple the country simply for short-term benefits and, even worse, people who ought to know better abandoning their objectivity to go along with a perverse policy that puts short-term economic gain ahead of lives.


  34. Also the possibility lies in those people who carries the virus and shows no symptoms unless they are tested
    One can bet that many of those being tested at the airport and found to be asymptomatic might not have shown symptons until they were tested
    Saying that not knowing of any one to have the virus can be false statement unlesss those that one knows was tested
    Reason why the CDC and other health officials speaks of cautionary measures


  35. This is a beautiful paper.
    It also has a spreadsheet where you can plug in numbers to see the value of having a second test.
    https://brownmath.com/stat/falsepos.htm

    Pass on contributions riddle with ifs, I think, I feel, I believe, may or may not, will never know….


  36. People are flocking to Barbados because of our free Covid 19 space to day.

    To the throwashadecrew remain in your cold boxes in the north and across the Atlantic and whine (bitch).


  37. David put on your cork hat here is some more shade being thrown your way

    https://swimswam.com/2020-olympic-hosts-japan-will-close-borders-on-monday-to-most-foreign-nationals/


  38. David people are also.”flocking”to Jamaica and other Carribbean islands
    However the difference between those other islands and us is their great concern for the well being of their people by acting swiftly to close their borders to visitors from the UK
    David go buy a cork hat u would be needing one soon


  39. To the throwashadecrew remain in your cold boxes in the north and across the Atlantic and whine (bitch)….(Quote)

    What a nice thing to say, the first Sunday after Xmas and the day before Holy Innocents day.


  40. Nice sunny day in Barbados. The blogmaster is off to the beach for a little beach party.

    #islandparadise


  41. DavidDecember 27, 2020 12:33 PM

    Nice sunny day in Barbados. The blogmaster is off to the beach for a little beach party.

    Dont forget to wear yuh mask and stay six feet away from people


  42. Hope you sign a new contract with your paymasters. You are doing a good job.


  43. We are having a lot of fun which includes rum and cokes.

    #islandlife


  44. “Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence”
    The fact that they do not publish their models does not mean that modeling is not being done.

    I have been closely following statements issued by government. Where possible, I have been trying to gain insight into their models, but lack of information make it impossible for me to do so. However, from their statements it is clear to me that they are using sound statistical and data driven models.

    There was a time I thought it was just luck, but if you roll a fair die, it will not give you a six on every roll.

    One of my fears is that with the constant introduction of cases onto the island and with the silly behavior of some, we may end up with community spread. This will be food for some.

    A second fear is that the government may be too lenient with tourists. There is a story about a visitor leaving his/her hotel..I have yet to read of his/her punishment.
    #throwinglight


  45. Criticizing our beloved government for its Corona policies is not only totally unpatriotic, it is malicious.

    Our government has done everything right: we have a lot of tourists again, but still no local infections. With the DLP in power, the situation would be very different: anarchy, streets full of dead people, hunger, poverty, crime, and the political leadership in their mansions in Florida or Toronto.

    Only our critics living abroad see it differently. I really wonder if they even know where our island is. Here, the situation is totally relaxed. I know many tourists who write thank-you letters to our Supreme Leader and president-elect.


  46. There will be room for improvement. This has become an issue with the increasing numbers of visitors who want to get away from Covid 18 infested jurisdictions. The blogmaster expects we will see a greater enforcement of Covid 19 protocols going forward.


  47. One would hope that the millions spent on the health cost of one visitor could have been used to rebuild the bridgetown area and the infrastructure
    Policies which are needed and helpful in putting barbadians back to work and which would be an encouragement to help revamp and restruct our economny
    Also a most welcomed and appealing sight for vistors whose monies would be of worthwhile spending amongst the locals in culture and dining cuisine

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