Apr 12, 2020 -- 2:17PM, InsiderTrader wrote:
Angoose trying his best deflection methods here.Of course in an ideal world everyone would have PPE.That includes nurses, doctors, police, train drivers, delivery drivers, shop workers and the general public.The reality is there are shortages and the best logistics minds in the country are trying to keep up with demand.
Very good IT, very good, deflect an attempt to prevent deflection
Apr 12, 2020 -- 7:07PM, potlis wrote:
Angoose, I will answer your questions when you clarify what your asking, is question 2 asking whether I believe all employers have a statutory obligation to provide full PPE against cov19?
My questions are precisely as written.
In general, you are not going to see specific named medical conditions within health and safety legislation and regulations.
Instead, they will talk in more general terms, setting out guidelines that require appropriate risk review tools to be in place that will seek to ensure existing risks are appropriately managed and that new and emerging risks are identified and also appropriately managed.
Apr 12, 2020 -- 8:55PM, impossible123 wrote:
If so, is like the army refusing to go to war because the other side has better weapons and more soldiers. I'm afraid deal with the rpesent situation as best as possible then take the government - present and future - to task for inadequate safety gear. If not address vote with their feet and walk away - the NHS is bigger than any government.But, I think the NHS needs to be streamlined and cannot function at its optimum in his present manner. No amount of money can provide every service it's presently trying to offer.
no, it's more like this
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/chilcot-report-iraq-war-troops-were-sent-in-under-equipped-and-military-was-humiliated-by-local-a7123561.html
Britain’s troops were sent to war in Iraq under-prepared and with “serious equipment shortfalls” and the military involvement in Basra ended with a “humiliating” bargain with local militias not to target its forces, according to the Chilcot.
The full scope of Britain’s contribution was only settled in mid-January 2003, weeks before the invasion, leaving barely any time to prepare three brigades for their combat roles. The extent of the risks were “neither properly identified nor fully exposed to ministers”, Sir John Chilcot said in a damning assessment which will vindicate the long-standing criticisms by families of service personnel who were killed in Iraq.
So rapid was the deployment and so under-prepared were the Armed Forces that initially there was even a shortage of desert uniforms and boots.