Hard to confirm or deny it, but I was once in a good old texty-chatroomy-type thing (could have been IRC, an in-game chat on a MUD, anything I would have been using at the time - can't now actually recall what context it was) where one of the participants was saying as how his nose wouldn't stop bleeding, and everyone was trying to pursuade him to go to A&E/whatever, but he wasn't keen because of the costs of doing so. There wasn't much we could do, even to try to attempt to localise him in any way and he (maybe 'he'?) quit 'normally' rather than go idle, so I always rather hope the problem was sorted (or sorted itself) in a good way.
(Yes, there's even a possibility it was trolling, or whatever the term would be at the time, but it wasn't as much a 'cry for help' so it wasn't really a very thorough trolling, just something that worryingly bemused us, probably lacking any other 'Merkins on at a more Europe-friendly time to while away some chat time while the US was mostly at work and we in the time of the evening leisure-/pleasure-seekers of the moment. I've thought a lot about it, and probably introduced a lot of internal details in the repetition of that pondering that now merge indivisibly into the original memory. But even if it wasn't genuine, or quite as it appeared, it holds up that it at least is based upon the fact that the US system overly discourages 'casual' use, intruding firmly into real medical emergency territory. And the system will probably have improved, by now, but nowhere near as much as it should/could have, from all accounts.)
Oh, yeah, anyway, no-one has mentioned that Boris Johnson invented a Tier 4 Lockdown (not sure how it compares to the Scottish one, but I bet it's different[1], 'cos Boris) for all of London and a large part of the surrounding South-East/almost-South-East (and Peterborough, apparently, up into the English midlands), which effectively "cancels their Christmas". No meeting of more than
one person outside.
No household mixing.
No Christmas 'relaxation'. (Which has been unrelaxed even for the other English version of Tiers from five days across Christmas down to a single one of up to ?three? households co-bubbling in one or other of their houses.)
Charitably, perhaps the reason that as recently as the middle of the week he was saying "We're relaxing the rules around Christmas, but expect you to be sensible about it" is that he
knew he'd have to react like this to the Covid-19-FFS (now apparently 70ish% more transmissable!) but if he announced restrictions to be applied to the traditional "a week on Thursday" he'd have everyone trying to beat the barricades and jam the stations. This way he has slammed it down
But I think he's just making it up as he goes along, and realised that today's decision couldn't be done a Week On Thursday, because that'd now be New Year's Eve and the Christmas mixing would go ahead
even more intensely.
Scotland's not even using any of its previously-defined Tier 4 restrictions anywhere right now, I think, and the Scottish Borders are happily in Tier 1 (Scottish version), but abutting Cumbria in Tier 2 (English version) and Northumberland in Tier 3 (English version). The closest English Tier 1 is Herefordshire (the penultimate southerly area that borders on Wales - which is yet a different story!), then it's just Cornwall, the Isle of Wight (where everyone eventually tends to go after the Day Of The Triffids, with their flamethrower patrols to keep it a safe haven for the remains of humanity[2], if that helps) and the Isles of Scilly (basically small crumbs off the tip Cornwall that somehow drifted into the Atlantic).
[1] If anyone wants to actually compare subnational rules info on gov.uk (England and NI), gov.scot, gov.wales (or llyw.cymru if you prefer!) then you're welcome to fill yer boots! There's also gov.je, gov.gg (not sure about the others in the group) and gov.im. Though by the time you're reaching for gov.gi you've probably got to check .eu betwixt (or probably .fr and .es versions, with .ie off to one side and most of the others I could mention in a wide arc round the other, excepting .is and .pt).
[2] The English bit of humanity, that is. As defined in the 1950s. Which, given that you have to change your watch back to the 1950s if you visit the IoW, makes it effectively contemporarily, relatively speaking!