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  • #16
    Originally posted by Emaresee View Post
    valuable work though mate... ckeep it up. Dont know how badly you are affected up there... stay well
    Indeed, suddenly all health related workers are needed &more appreciated. Be nice to think this will lasdt long after the virus but don't hold your breath.
    Simon Bolivar: Liberator of Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru & Venezuela.

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    • #17
      Originally posted by Haaltert View Post
      Tx Mike, is that FB messenger?


      Verzonden vanaf mijn iPad met Tapatalk
      Yes.

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      • #18
        Originally posted by Stevieboy View Post
        I wish I could join you. Work is fucking insane just now. I did a 13 hour day yesterday and I'm away in early expecting to do much the same. Every patient in the village had requested a prescription and the surgery has three doctors self isolating.... Not fun I can tell you.
        I'm not sure how much more of this I can take ... Exhausted

        Henrik.... You are a wise man for getting out of pharmacy!



        Sent from my SM-G975F using Tapatalk
        Steve your work is HIGHLY appreciated I HOPE!

        All county councils in Denmark have requested people with a health educational background to sign up for reserve work duty if such will be needed, and I have considered to do so in the event it becomes critical.

        For now I?m 100% concerned about keeping our live saving haemophilia product production totally segregated from any infection possibility together with production currently at 150%.

        I strongly believe everyone who can is doing the utmost to throw in whatever resources they have in this situation.

        For now, save as much of yourself as you can, I believe it?s going to get worse before it gets better.


        Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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        • #19
          Agree with your prediction Henrik, & sounds like you are doing vital work already so I'd still at that. Gotta help a very vulnerable group a lot more than taking another voluntary role.
          Simon Bolivar: Liberator of Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru & Venezuela.

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          • #20
            Was just speaking to a colleague in HK. Life is turning to some normality after a couple of months. Offices are open. People are cautious. But life is somewhat normal...

            Let's just hope we can keep it together. Supermarkets are worse than ever. I can't even comprehend what's going on for people in the medical and pharmaceutical industry right now...

            Just thanks...
            .--
            I think I may finally have this CAD under control...

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            • #21
              My wife's a pharmacy dispenser at a GP's. The normally reckon they're on top of things if they carry-forward c 250 'scrips' at the end of any day. This morning she said they are never fewer than 1,500. Also, people asking for (but not getting!) six months of drugs.

              My son's a Registrar in a major regional hospital. He's on Covid-19 duty as is his girlfriend, an ICU Sister. For him this means deciding who gets a bed and a ventilator. He says they're on a 'war footing' but waiting for their first cases. Says they're all apprehensive but also excited - most of them seem resigned to contracting this thing, but they see it as the most extreme test of their training and something that they will likely never have a chance to experience again in their professional lifetime. I remember hearing young aircrew say a similar thing ahead of the Iraq War - a chance to pit their training against something serious. There's a real camaraderie. Very impressed (and proud), but also concerned...

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              • #22
                Originally posted by grumpybaldy View Post
                My wife's a pharmacy dispenser at a GP's. The normally reckon they're on top of things if they carry-forward c 250 'scrips' at the end of any day. This morning she said they are never fewer than 1,500. Also, people asking for (but not getting!) six months of drugs.

                My son's a Registrar in a major regional hospital. He's on Covid-19 duty as is his girlfriend, an ICU Sister. For him this means deciding who gets a bed and a ventilator. He says they're on a 'war footing' but waiting for their first cases. Says they're all apprehensive but also excited - most of them seem resigned to contracting this thing, but they see it as the most extreme test of their training and something that they will likely never have a chance to experience again in their professional lifetime. I remember hearing young aircrew say a similar thing ahead of the Iraq War - a chance to pit their training against something serious. There's a real camaraderie. Very impressed (and proud), but also concerned...
                Bravo to them... and forward thanks for everything!
                "Dear heart, you're talking to a man- a real man- who drinks straight Tequilla, with lime and salt on the rim, and smokes cigars" (J Zavala)

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                • #23
                  My mates missus is a doctor in London. They'll stop giving a sh!t soon [emoji53]
                  .--
                  I think I may finally have this CAD under control...

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