That is very sad and has been quite common. They call it ‘happy hypoxia’ where the individuals’s oxygen levels are dangerously low yet they can carry on a normal existence at the same time as their organs are suffering serious damage.
There are suggestions that getting a pulse oximeter for use at hope might persuade the ambulance to come out to you if you find you have a low oxygen level.
That means nothing. He makes mistakes and sometimes gets away with them. Last night he made two short passes straight to a Leicester player. The first led to a good chance for them and a good save from McCarthy, the second led straight to their goal. There’s something wrong with his visual appreciation of the situation. He just doesn’t see the opposition player. It’s not as though they were miskicks or underhit.
The way that Maddison swept past him was not what you expect of a Premier League defender.
We’ve just polished off a takeaway that I walked back with. Prawn purri , meat rogon josh, vegetarian balti and pilau rice and a chicken tikka starter which I shall save until tomorrow.
It’s on BT tomorrow, which is all that matters. Whether I shall be allowed to hog the tele for two hours on a Saturday night is another matter. I have fallbacks but one is cold and the other uncomfortable.
A letter in The Times today,
Sir, If a cup of tea counts as a picnic, does that mean that when we’re allowed back into the pubs we don’t need a Scotch egg?Iain McCoubrey
Letcombe Regis, Oxon
It's only 15:25. There's still a lot of the day left yet but if as someone above suggested they are waiting on the result of tonight's draw then I wouldn't expect a decision until tomorrow.
The R rate is a broad average and what this example demonstrates is the variation in the K number which is a measure of the spread in how many other people any particular person infects.
In this case there seems to be a super-spreader. Maybe there is something about this individual’s behaviour that causes the raised infections?