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Who Checks Up On People Self Isolating After Holiday?
Does anyone check if people who need to self isolate for 14 days after arriving back off holiday are actually doing it?
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No best answer has yet been selected by dave50. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.//Probably think you have gone out and a fine comes through the post?//
I don’t think so. They have to prove that I’m out. Not getting an answer from my front door and them “thinking” I am out does not do so.
//Are you hiding at that point or do you shout through the door,'I'm here but not opening up'?//
I’m doing neither. I’m indoors reading a book with all the curtains closed.
//How do you know the person you’re answering the door to doesn’t have COVID?//
I don’t. That’s one of the reasons I’m reluctant to answer the door. :-)
The serious point is that this nonsense is unenforceable. Unless they actually intercept me whilst I’m out, enforcement is impossible. If they suspect I’m out when they call they will have to wait outside my house until I return (and even then I may sneak in the back door if I spy them at the front). In my scenario above they’ll wait a very long time. If I really was out, perhaps for the day they would equally be in for a wait. This legislation relies on compliance and I’m not so sure that people coming back from their hols will comply with these draconian measures. The legislation is far more harsh than the March lockdown. It is truly “house arrest.” You cannot leave for exercise; in fact you cannot go out at all except for a very few specific purposes such as to get medical treatment, to partake in legal proceedings and to go shopping “…to obtain basic necessities such as food and medical supplies for those in the same household (including any pets or animals in the household) where it is not possible to obtain these provisions in any other manner.”
It is truly a breathtakingly Draconian piece of legislation, the likes of which I have never seen and hope never to see again. But most of all, apart from being unenforceable unless by pure luck, it is also an extremely blunt instrument. Many of the places from which people will arrive and are expected to isolate have far lower rates of infection than the places they are isolating in. It is a preposterous attempt to be seen to be “doing something”: “Quarantine is ‘something’, so let’s do that.”
I would never normally encourage law breaking but when the law is “a ass” and it is drafted principally by asses it is disreputable and is worthy of the contempt which dd proposes to demonstrate.
I don’t think so. They have to prove that I’m out. Not getting an answer from my front door and them “thinking” I am out does not do so.
//Are you hiding at that point or do you shout through the door,'I'm here but not opening up'?//
I’m doing neither. I’m indoors reading a book with all the curtains closed.
//How do you know the person you’re answering the door to doesn’t have COVID?//
I don’t. That’s one of the reasons I’m reluctant to answer the door. :-)
The serious point is that this nonsense is unenforceable. Unless they actually intercept me whilst I’m out, enforcement is impossible. If they suspect I’m out when they call they will have to wait outside my house until I return (and even then I may sneak in the back door if I spy them at the front). In my scenario above they’ll wait a very long time. If I really was out, perhaps for the day they would equally be in for a wait. This legislation relies on compliance and I’m not so sure that people coming back from their hols will comply with these draconian measures. The legislation is far more harsh than the March lockdown. It is truly “house arrest.” You cannot leave for exercise; in fact you cannot go out at all except for a very few specific purposes such as to get medical treatment, to partake in legal proceedings and to go shopping “…to obtain basic necessities such as food and medical supplies for those in the same household (including any pets or animals in the household) where it is not possible to obtain these provisions in any other manner.”
It is truly a breathtakingly Draconian piece of legislation, the likes of which I have never seen and hope never to see again. But most of all, apart from being unenforceable unless by pure luck, it is also an extremely blunt instrument. Many of the places from which people will arrive and are expected to isolate have far lower rates of infection than the places they are isolating in. It is a preposterous attempt to be seen to be “doing something”: “Quarantine is ‘something’, so let’s do that.”
I would never normally encourage law breaking but when the law is “a ass” and it is drafted principally by asses it is disreputable and is worthy of the contempt which dd proposes to demonstrate.
//I'm still keen to know the subtle difference between quarantine, self-isolation and shielding.//
There's not a subtle difference, jd. There is a violent difference. The earlier instructions of self-isolation and shielding were largely advisory. The quarantine legislation places a legal requirement on those returning from abroad to place themselves under house arrest. And it won't do. It won't do at all.
There's not a subtle difference, jd. There is a violent difference. The earlier instructions of self-isolation and shielding were largely advisory. The quarantine legislation places a legal requirement on those returning from abroad to place themselves under house arrest. And it won't do. It won't do at all.
I so agree with you NJ @ 1933 and it's very encouraging to know there are at least some like you who view this whole fiasco from a sensible rather than hysterical viewpoint.
To add to who's going to know don't forget to remember the nosy neighbours, there are plenty who will be happy to dob people in.
To add to who's going to know don't forget to remember the nosy neighbours, there are plenty who will be happy to dob people in.
Good point NJ.
You would not get fined for not answering your door if you were in, that would be preposterous.
The thousands returning from abroad can not be surveilled 24/7, so there is virtually no chance of them getting caught (not quarantining). When there is a massive probability of not getting caught, then that encourages people to ignore the restriction and going out.
You would not get fined for not answering your door if you were in, that would be preposterous.
The thousands returning from abroad can not be surveilled 24/7, so there is virtually no chance of them getting caught (not quarantining). When there is a massive probability of not getting caught, then that encourages people to ignore the restriction and going out.
“ And at what point would you suggest they test? Only at the very end of the 14 days would it be useful surely due to the incubation period?”
??
The incubation period is the delay between infection and showing symptoms. It shouldn’t affect a test.
There are plans to introduce testing points at Heathrow at least. I see no reason why this cannot be fast-tracked. Blanket imposition of quarantine on people after all the fuss about “airbridges” is outrageous. Totally half cocked. But people grin and bear it I suppose because they dont want to be seen to throw a spanner in the works.
??
The incubation period is the delay between infection and showing symptoms. It shouldn’t affect a test.
There are plans to introduce testing points at Heathrow at least. I see no reason why this cannot be fast-tracked. Blanket imposition of quarantine on people after all the fuss about “airbridges” is outrageous. Totally half cocked. But people grin and bear it I suppose because they dont want to be seen to throw a spanner in the works.
//So people coming home from a country where there's evidence of an increase in the number of Covid 19 to the UK,should just wander back home?//
Why not? I can wander freely to and from other parts of the UK where infection rates are much higher than some of the places people return from and are being forced to quarantine. It makes more sense to quarantine me when I return from some places in northern England than it does to quarantine deskdiary when he returns from Mallorca. The legislation is a farce and is placing people under house arrest when no good reason prevails. After all, it's hardly travellers' fault if the government agencies cannot differentiate between Catalonia and the Canaries or Balearics, is it?
Why not? I can wander freely to and from other parts of the UK where infection rates are much higher than some of the places people return from and are being forced to quarantine. It makes more sense to quarantine me when I return from some places in northern England than it does to quarantine deskdiary when he returns from Mallorca. The legislation is a farce and is placing people under house arrest when no good reason prevails. After all, it's hardly travellers' fault if the government agencies cannot differentiate between Catalonia and the Canaries or Balearics, is it?
My area is in re-lockdown - a spike in cases. Many people returning from abroad are coming from a holiday destination with far lower cases than here, and lower than their friends and neighbours - but supposed to lock themselves away for a fortnight on their return.
Not saying they shouldn’t quarantine, just that the arbitrary nature and nonsense of the regs makes it difficult to comply with them.
Not saying they shouldn’t quarantine, just that the arbitrary nature and nonsense of the regs makes it difficult to comply with them.
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