This is amazing. And it’s truly the stuff of nightmares.
27.10.2025 11:08 — 👍 18377 🔁 7302 💬 930 📌 788@ebon-hawk.bsky.social
This is amazing. And it’s truly the stuff of nightmares.
27.10.2025 11:08 — 👍 18377 🔁 7302 💬 930 📌 788SARS2 is a Biohazard @mysteriousrona I'll never forget the fact that children were and still are being purposefully exposed to SARS-CoV-2 as a method of facilitating herd immunity, which has proven to be ineffective. 11:59 AM · Oct 28, 2025 · 1,091 Views
Herd immunity by infection wasn’t protection. It drove immune dysfunction and chronic illness. It’s a tragedy that this was allowed to happen — and still is.
Source: x.com/mysteriousro...
Boris Johnson trying to rewrite history suggesting that he didn't have advice of long covid in children, when he had - disgraceful
➡️ Currently 110,000 children in the UK have long covid (and 1.9 million adults)
➡️The NHS has set up over 100 specialized Long COVID services costing £314 million
CEO pay is up 1,094% since 1978, while worker pay is up just 26%.
Why do we always hear "we can't afford to pay our workers more" but never "we can't afford to pay our CEO more"?
Farage is applying for a job.
That job is Prime Minister.
The only thing on his CV is Brexit.
He campaigned for it for 27 years.
So his only real track record is making everyone poorer & damaging the NHS.
If you hire Nigel & Reform, you must want this company (UK) to fail.
‘Some doctors swear blind it does not exist’: Why this leading specialist is still focused on long COVID By Bella Rough | 25 September 2025 | AusDoc Associate Professor Anthony Byrne gets that some doctors are sick of COVID-19 and its sequelae. “People probably have a bit of PTSD about it,” he says. “It changed so many facets of everyone’s life that lots of people want to put that behind them, in the community, the media and, to some degree, medically.
“But it was also an amazing opportunity to learn about a new illness and discover, in real time, how to investigate and manage it.” The Sydney respiratory physician has specialised in long COVID for five years. He was part of a long COVID clinic at St Vincent’s Hospital in Sydney from its inception until this month, when hospital management decided to close it. A hospital spokesperson said patients would transition to specialist respiratory and rehabilitation services. Professor Byrne also plans to keep seeing patients with long COVID privately. However, he worries about patients with long COVID struggling to find doctors with the skills, suitable appointment length and inclination to treat them. “Unfortunately, some doctors will swear blind that long COVID does not exist, but this is not a made-up disease,” said Professor Byrne, convenor of the Respiratory Infectious Diseases special interest group at the Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand. He said governments were failing to properly fund multidisciplinary clinics, which meant patients were often defaulted to being treated by whichever specialists were available to them. “Hopefully, the specialists have an interest in listening to patients and identifying what their problems are, doing appropriate assessments to “Hopefully, the specialists have an interest in listening to patients and identifying what their problems are, doing appropriate assessments to identify things they can treat: the person with undiagnosed diabetes, the person with undiagnosed ischaemia. “That’ll be important and will help a lot of people.
“But for a certain percentage, it’s very difficult in a 30-minute specialist consultation to deal with the psychiatric aspect, the psychosocial aspect, the disability aspect, that they haven’t worked in six months, the can-you-fill-in-these-forms-for-six months, the can-you-fill-in-these-forms-for-me.” He said the multidisciplinary approach at the St Vincent’s clinic involved different specialists reviewing the patient’s symptoms and trying to establish a phenotype for each patient. “In people with an asthma-type phenotype, we found that when we prescribed them medications essentially for asthma, which had not been previously diagnosed or treated, they seemed to have an improvement in symptoms and trajectory. “That’s one example. “Another is when we have someone with poor sleep hygiene because one of the symptoms of long COVID is fatigue. “People sleep when they’re tired during the day, but it puts out the circadian rhythm. “So we give them advice on sleep hygiene and maybe prescribe melatonin where appropriate, and look to identify other sleep disorders. “People with obstructive sleep apnoea are much more likely to have severe COVID disease, and there’s also an association with long COVID. “As you can imagine, if people are fatigued and have severe sleep apnoea and don’t know about it, people get better if that’s diagnosed and treated.” Without a multidisciplinary team, patients risked bouncing between expensive specialist appointments until they found the right path, Professor Byrne said.
For example, patients with long COVID could have chest pain and be referred to a cardiologist when the cause lies in other organ systems. “No offence to my cardiologist colleagues, because the cardiologist would appropriately do investigations — ECG, maybe a stress test, “No offence to my cardiologist colleagues, because the cardiologist would appropriately do investigations — ECG, maybe a stress test, maybe a CT coronary angiogram — and exclude important diagnoses like critical ischaemia, cardiomyopathy or arrhythmia,” Professor Byrne said. “But the patient has spent their money, had two or three appointments with the specialist, lightened their wallet a lot, and still has this symptom of chest pain. “So you look at the other contributing factors or organ systems: the brain, the respiratory system, the gastrointestinal system.” Ultimately, the approach to long COVID was “just good medicine”, he said. “You listen to patients, you do no harm, you look to identify those conditions that you know about and provide treatment for, then you reassess and follow up.”
‘Some doctors swear blind it does not exist’: Why this leading specialist is still focused on long COVID.
"Professor Anthony Byrne says the difficulty with long COVID is the phenotypes can fall into various specialties."
Source: www.ausdoc.com.au/news/some-do...
It’s gone so quickly from ‘boat people’ to all immigrants. So quickly from ‘I don’t mind if they come here legally and pay taxes’ to ‘actually it’s anyone foreign’. We are living in the ‘first they came for’ poem. All to give the population a scapegoat so the super rich can hoard yet more wealth.
25.09.2025 07:38 — 👍 5807 🔁 1679 💬 159 📌 81No immigrant has ever sacked me, or cut my wages, or offshored my job, or closed my hospital, or stopped my mum's disability benefits, or crashed the economy.
Those things were all done by white English men who went to Oxford and wore a nice suit.
Covid is a social justice issue, especially now that governments have abandoned us in favour of “you do you” policies that leave the vulnerable by the wayside
Wearing a mask is a form of resistance
It protects your health & the health of your community
It says you don’t view others as expendable
I'd probably go further and fund boosters for children too, everyone eligible for flu vaccination on the NHS should be able to get a covid booster too. Despite type 2 diabetes, a heart condition and being nearly 70 my mum is no longer eligible. This is shameful.
Please sign.
I've paid my 100 quid.
"Sublineage of Omicron" is as meaningful as simply referring to both blue whales and fruit bats as "sublineages of mammals".
21.08.2025 12:53 — 👍 62 🔁 12 💬 4 📌 2"What do we know about the Covid-19 virus 5 years on?"
"The growing body of research suggesting that for several months after a Covid infection, people become more vulnerable to other infections and there can be lingering effects on the heart, cardiovascular system and the brain."
#COVIDisNotOVER
This about covers it.
04.08.2025 20:45 — 👍 13030 🔁 4145 💬 244 📌 176Covid-19 outbreak closes two wards at major Scots hospital The major hospital has closed the wards to all but essential visitors. News Gemma Ryder Reporter 19:02, 27 Jul 2025
Scotland: 2 wards at Aberdeen Royal Infirmary have been shut down following a COVID outbreak.
Statement on social media: “Due to cases of COVID, wards 110 and 308 at Aberdeen Royal Infirmary are closed to all but ESSENTIAL visitors"
Source: archive.md/YjPFp
'Disabling' Chronic Illness in Children Not Taken Seriously: Experts Published Jul 25, 2025 at 11:41 AM EDT Updated Jul 25, 2025 at 12:12 PM EDT
'Disabling' Chronic Illness in Children Not Taken Seriously
“It was found that... 15%, who had previously tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 infection were identified as likely having long COVID... Suggesting it has become one of the most common chronic illnesses in children.”
Source: archive.md/XewA8
Miriam Margolyes names her current big issue. #GazaGenocide #GazaHolocaust
28.07.2025 00:22 — 👍 380 🔁 163 💬 8 📌 17This says it all, cleanly & clearly. Please share.
07.07.2025 12:10 — 👍 13 🔁 8 💬 0 📌 0Well - would you look at that!?
Rees-Mogg will be apoplectic. Good.
www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home...
2000ad.com/news/i-am-th...
30.06.2025 20:55 — 👍 37 🔁 17 💬 1 📌 1Left: Louise Haigh, "I will support the government on Tuesday in recognition they've made significant progress, and protecting the incomes of 400,000 disabled people across the country"
Right: Rosie Jones, "They're not thinking about the millions of people who will become disabled in the future"
Labour MP Neil Duncan-Jordan, "The Labour gov think that can raise £5 billion though these welfare cuts"
"Most of those savings will be wiped out because people who lose their benefits will end up putting more pressure on the NHS"
"It's a dead end because it's making poorer people even poorer"
Somebody saw Gattaca and thought “that’s a good idea” 🙄
NHS plans to DNA test all babies to assess disease risk www.bbc.com/news/article...
May 22, 2025 The GIST COVID virus 'reprograms' infection fighters into immune system suppressors, study shows by Michael E. Newman, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine edited by Gaby Clark, reviewed by Robert Egan
A Johns Hopkins study found SARS-CoV-2 may reprogram neutrophils—the body’s most common white blood cells—disabling their pathogen-fighting role. Instead, they suppress other immune cells, weakening the immune response and potentially worsening COVID-19 outcomes.
Source: archive.md/kSXuG
CEO of Homecare Association responding to Labour cutting visas for care workers,
"If we have shortages it will mean that more people end up in hospital unnecessarily"
"This ends up increasing NHS waiting lists"
Dumb on so many levels.
Demographically: there simply aren't enough Britons to staff the care sector, especially with a growing elderly population. There never will be.
Economically: the UK only has ANY kind of GDP growth because of immigration, so ...
www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2025...