In the Coronavirus Fight in Scandinavia, Sweden Stands Apart

Discussion in 'Politics' started by wildchild, Mar 30, 2020.

  1. Buy1Sell2

    Buy1Sell2

    That's unfortunate. He is the only thing standing between us and the total meltdown of America.
     
    #811     Aug 5, 2020
    Dr. Love likes this.
  2. Buy1Sell2

    Buy1Sell2

    I'm ok with folks not wearing masks. I doubt that there is a high risk of heart damage.
     
    #812     Aug 5, 2020
  3. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    More on the media narrative and the joke it has become. There's so much stuff out there it is a wonder so many are so stubborn about the numbers.

     
    #813     Aug 7, 2020
    Dr. Love likes this.
  4. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Sweden's no-lockdown strategy is beginning to look like less of an outlier, but still doesn't compare well to other countries
    https://www.businessinsider.com/swe...-but-other-countries-still-fare-better-2020-8
    • Sweden has been a closely-watched example of a country which decided to not to implement a lockdown in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
    • The government said that theirs was a long-term strategy that would eventually bring better results than lockdowns, which have brought their own problems including mass unemployment.
    • Initially, the policy looked like a clear failure, as the virus spread faster than in comparable nations.
    • However, Sweden's cases have started to decline recently, bringing them more in line with countries that did lockdown.
    • But on balance Sweden's metrics are still lagging its neighbors, suggesting that their strategy has yet to redeem itself.
    • One expert said it would be "dangerous" to paint Sweden's response as a success.
    Sweden's coronavirus cases have fallen and remained down from their peak, returning it closer to comparable nations after its policy of avoiding sweeping lockdown policies had initially led to elevated deaths and infections.

    However, although its numbers of daily deaths and new cases has declined from its own peak, they still compare poorly to its immediate neighbors, which took a harder line on the virus.

    While most of Europe was confining citizens to their homes and closing businesses, Sweden relied on people to socially distance without drastically changing their lives.

    It introduced only a handful of rules, like banning visits to nursing homes and gatherings of more than 50 people.

    The logic was that a gentler approach would be more sustainable in the long-term, and avoid a dynamic whereby the virus was kept at bay only as long as the nation could withstand severe restrictions.

    Initially, it did not look good — the number of Swedish people dying from the virus soared in the lax environment. Its per-capita death rate became one of the worst in the world by March, as other nations were taking desperate measures to rein in the virus.

    More than four months later, Sweden is now on a trajectory much closer to that of other European nations. Its daily new infections have now fallen from a peak the end of June, and have stayed down since.

    But its current position still doesn't look good compared to many European countries.

    Sweden's cases have only been down from their peak for just over a month.

    In comparison, countries like the UK, Ireland, and Italy had their peaks earlier, in April and May, and cases have stayed down with no spikes since.

    This is what Sweden looks like:

    [​IMG]
    Sweden's coronavirus cases as of August 5.
    Worldometer
    Compared to Italy:

    [​IMG]
    Italy's coronavirus cases as of August 5.
    Worldometer


    The UK:

    [​IMG]
    UK coronavirus cases as of August 5.
    Worldometer
    And Ireland:

    [​IMG]
    Ireland's coronavirus cases as of August 5.
    Worldometer
    Many other European countries follow the same pattern.

    As well as having its decline in numbers later, Sweden also has had a less sharp decline overall.

    Over the last seven days, the UK, with a population of 66 million, has seen an average of 818 new cases a day.

    And Italy, with a population of 60 million, has seen an average of 208 cases a day.

    While Sweden, with around 10 million people, has seen an average of 212 new cases a day.

    That means Sweden's new daily coronavirus cases are, as a proportion of population, more than 1.5 times higher than those in the UK, and around six times higher than in Italy.

    The UK and Italy were two of the worst-hit countries in Europe.

    Sweden has also arrived at this point with a higher death rate than most countries in Europe.

    Professor Luke O'Neill, an an immunologist at Ireland's Trinity College Dublin who is following European responses, previously told Business Insider that Sweden's total deaths are a strong sign that its approach failed.

    "Everywhere is reopening now and we're on the same playing field. So that initial number of deaths is what counts. And there's a lot more deaths in Sweden."

    Europe is worried about a second wave
    As they reopen, many European countries have started to see cases rise. These include Belgium, Spain, France, Greece, and Denmark.

    Others, like Germany, are warning that they are starting to experience a second wave.

    Sweden is not in this situation.

    But this position is not unique: other European countries, like Norway, Finland, Ireland, the UK, Italy, Portugal, have not seen any big spikes.

    The countries listed above followed more conventional strategies — suggesting that Sweden's comparative lack of a resurgence is due to other factors.

    And Sweden is still worried that a second wave could come. Local governments are warning of crowding in areas where people are gathering for summer holidays, and Stockholm is warning that its restaurants are too busy.

    Prof. Jan Albert, an infectious diseases expert at Sweden's Karolinska Instituet, told Business Insider that it would be "dangerous to push the message" that Sweden is performing better than the rest of Europe.

    He said that risk was especially high once schools and offices reopen after the country's long summer holidays.

    "We definitely have come down from a peak, but whether we will see an increase again later in the year, especially when workplaces and schools open up again, we don't know."

    "It's likely that we will see at least smaller outbreaks and possibly some kind of second wave or peak.

    "No one can say for certain that there won't be a second wave in Sweden, or in other places."

    Sweden's policies are still unusual
    Sweden has these concerns without having eased its restrictions.

    Its plan was designed to be long-term: it avoided a strict lockdown so the regime could continue for months on end without causing great damage, or demoralizing people so much that they gave up following the rules.

    But now, because Sweden hasn't eased its rules even as other countries started to reopen, in some respects its restrictions are harsher than elsewhere.

    Norway, for example, now allows some gatherings of up to 200 people, while Sweden is still at 50.

    The one area that Sweden remains an outlier is its policy on masks.

    Most countries are encouraging citizens to wear them, and many have made them mandatory in shops and public transport.

    Sweden has no such requirements and its Public Health Agency says that face masks are "not needed in everyday life."

    Swedish officials argue that time will prove their strategy correct, provided the nation avoids the spikes that can come with easing restrictions, or fatigued citizens deciding to ignore them.

    As many Swedish experts previously told Business Insider, whether the strategy was the right call will only be known in time.
     
    #814     Aug 8, 2020
  5. Dr. Love

    Dr. Love

    All the while, there was a little pill called hydroxychloroquine, that if taken early on, along with zinc and Azithromycin, could have prevented much of the fear from escalating, but they shut that down too. Ask yourself WHY? They are warning against a drug that’s been around for 65 years with billions of doses going out in multiple countries, many of which make it available over the counter, a drug that has seen only 20 total deaths worldwide since 1963 – but, a vaccine for a virus, which has never been able to be produced to date, is being rushed with no long term clinical trial, and that’s not dangerous? Put that in perspective.

    https://www.coreysdigs.com/health-science/covid-19-the-coverup-the-cure-and-key-evidence/
     
    #815     Aug 8, 2020
  6. traderob

    traderob

  7. Nine_Ender

    Nine_Ender

    I see no evidence that Sweden's current policies and results differ much at all from those in Canada. So the narrative that their lock down approach ( or lack of ) was meaningful beyond an extra 3000 people dying is a crock of shit. Yet here we are with people still pushing it.
     
    #817     Aug 9, 2020
  8. LacesOut

    LacesOut

    That’s because you are a moron.
    Canada was in full lockdown mode. Businesses, schools, mandatory masks, etc...
    Sweden did none of those things.
    Now Canada has an extra half trillion in private and public debt...minimum...and a whole host of new enslaved tards at the teet.
    But great job Tam the broomstick!!!
     
    #818     Aug 9, 2020
  9. traderob

    traderob

    The Times

    By: Tom Whipple
    The question we all wanted answered was, were they right? And, its uncomfortable corollary, were the rest of us mad?

    ADVERTISEMENT


    Throughout the spring, Swedes continued to support the country's exceptionalism. They continued with borgfred, as photos of them gathered in the sun continued to appear in the world's press. In the shadows, though, deaths rose. Before March was out there were 100. By the second week of April, there were 1,000.

    In Norway, Denmark and Finland, death rates were at most a fifth that of Sweden.

    Related articles:
    WORLD
    Will Sweden get the last laugh? Positive signs from Stockholm
    10

    8
    This was when there were the first signs of Sweden's tentative borgfred crumbling. In mid-April (1,500 deaths), 22 scientists wrote an article in Dagens Nyheter, a national newspaper, accusing "officials without talent" of having "no well-thought-out, well-functioning strategy".

    Then in June (5,000 deaths), borgfred shattered. Ebba Busch, the leader of the Christian Democrats, dropped her solidarity. "The greater part of those who are now mourning over those they have lost this spring are doing so because Sweden quite knowingly allowed a large spread of the infection," she said.


    [​IMG]
    Sweden's Prime Minister Stefan Lofven. Photo / AP
    Castle peace was at an end and Stefan Lofven, the 63-year-old prime minister, called an inquiry. Dr Anders Tegnell, his state epidemiologist, confessed that he would do things differently given a second chance (though many reports missed off that he would not do things that differently).

    In locked-down countries, bored of restrictions and tired of being taunted by the tantalising Swedish counterexample, this was framed as vindication. As we squabbled over sourdough starters and toilet roll, our hardships were validated. The Swedish model had collapsed.

    Lofven, though, sees it differently. "Sometimes, too often, we have a black and white picture of this," he says, speaking to me over Zoom. "The pandemic," he reminds me, "is not over."

    The world is stilled. More than that, it is fractured. Planes no longer fly. Borders remain shut. Quarantines are in place for those who do travel.

    Where once we wandered at will in our globalised village, today our footprint is that of a medieval peasant – leading a life where visiting the next actual village (or, the nearest Waitrose) constitutes a grand day out.


    "I will eat my hat if the other Nordic countries have the same death rates in a year." - Dr Lena Einhorn


    In this world, Sweden has ceased for many to be a destination, a country to which you travel for business or pleasure. It has, instead, become an argument. A nation that went its own way is now a case study to be mustered in the clash between right and left.

    If you like chloroquine, don't like masks and perhaps do like Brexit, then Sweden is the exemplar of a nation that kept its head. It is, perhaps, not a coincidence that it has held out against masks, when even Trump is wearing one.

    If you like making NHS murals and reporting on your neighbours when they have too many guests at their barbecue, then Sweden is – as The New York Times recently termed it – a cautionary tale. It is a warning of what happens when you don't respect the virus.

    Lofven has enough going on at the moment not to be drawn into a culture war. His approach, he says, is a reflection of the way the country is organised, and it "suits us". With the sort of careful neutrality that kept his country out of wars for two centuries, he adds, "Perhaps not other countries – and I do want to respect them." Throughout our interview, he won't be drawn into criticism of other countries' approach. Lofven, whose English is, needless to say, perfect, is as practical and inoffensive as an Ikea Billy bookcase. Hard to dislike, unlikely to surprise.

    Neither, though I prod several times, will he confess to any feelings of doubt about his own strategy, even as deaths approach 6,000 – in a country of just 10 million. At least at this stage in the pandemic, the country is among the worst performers in the world (the UK – and we will come on to this – is worse). If he were English, you would say he plays a straight bat.

    There is no equivalent Swedish idiom to that phrase – although there is one that is used when someone has screwed up and knows judgment is coming: skita i det blaa skapet. It translates, somewhat mysteriously as "to shit in the blue cupboard". Given the divergence between policies in Sweden and the rest of Europe, it feels impossible that one of the parties hasn't soiled a cupboard somewhere.

    "We get into debates where everybody needs to defend their own choice. That's, to some extent, understandable," Lofven says. If there's a cupboard in need of a clean-up, either he's responsible for it or he's too polite to say who is. "I think we can learn from one another. I don't think it's black or white. We have different circumstances, different ways of running our societies, different decision processes, and so I think we need to be cautious."

    There is a view, not as absurd as it initially sounds, that Sweden did not go its own way. Instead, it is everyone else who abandoned Sweden.

    Many major European countries had pandemic plans. In many, including Britain, they were largely the same: suppress the virus, but don't stop it. A year ago, the idea that you could stop a society seemed absurd.


    [​IMG]
    People hang out in a coffee shop in central Stockholm in April. Photo / Getty Images
    Back in March, Sweden stuck to the plan, then watched as everybody else blinked.

    "We have not chosen a totally different strategy, a totally different approach," says Lofven. Behind him on Zoom is a screen made of blue curtains. It is a blank and oddly distracting backdrop, as if it is waiting for a special effects technician to project something more interesting onto it, something from a world before lockdown.

    "We work with the same basic strategy: to make sure that we try to limit the spread of the disease, flatten the curve, so that the healthcare sector can handle this situation – we did not want a dramatic increase of cases so that intensive care could not cope – trying to protect the elderly, and also making sure that we could somewhat dampen the effects of the economy on companies, enterprises and workers. Those are the things I think everybody approves of broadly."

    Elsewhere, watching Italy with panic and southeast Asia for inspiration, countries tore up their own plans and went further. They closed schools – a move some now regret. They closed shops and businesses. They ordered people to stay at home.

    Did he have twinges of doubt, as he saw the world change course? "When I listened to our experts, I saw that they knew what they were talking about... For me as a politician to say I know better than you? I couldn't find arguments against it."

    He was, in a familiar phrase, following the science. And if his science is different to that of other countries? If other national experts – just as eminent as his – had different advice? Well, to employ a phrase used by Tegnell, that is when you need ice in the stomach.

    The life of a Swede in a pandemic, Lofven is keen to point out, is not so different from that of the rest of us. Yes, more of their rules come as recommendations – but Swedes are good at obeying recommendations.

    Swedes, like us, are getting used to Zoom. They are, like us, far more likely now to work from home. Mobility data shows an initial 20 per cent drop in mobility – far less than, say, Spain but still astonishing in peacetime.

    "We didn't choose a totally different path. If you have symptoms, stay at home. Keep the distance. Don't be in crowds."

    The clearest difference is that they kept their schools open. They decided that the risk was low and the disruption was high – a judgment many in other countries now agree with. "Afterwards we can see, perhaps, that other countries that did close the schools say now that perhaps if there's another round [of outbreaks] they will not close."

    When Swedes do go out, for their tantalising coffees in town squares, just like us they try to keep their distance – and drink in bars and restaurants with strict conditions on capacity and mixing.

    Meanwhile, the rest of Europe is speeding up once more. We are keeping our distance; we are being careful. Our schools are tentatively opening, our pubs and restaurants operate under strict conditions on capacity and mixing.

    Some may think that Sweden at the beginning should have acted more like the rest of Europe. What is clear, though, is that the rest of Europe is now acting like Sweden.


    Diners at a cafe in Stockholm in April. Photo / Andres Kudacki, The New York Times
    So much so that Dr Mike Ryan, head of the emergencies programme at the World Health Organisation, pointed to the country as a route out of lockdown. "If we are to reach a new normal, in many ways Sweden represents a future model," he said.

    In the months to come, as the health and economic cost of lockdown becomes clear, the rest of Europe may well find – Lofven and his advisers contend – it would have been prudent to withhold their early judgment.

    His approach – or, rather, the approach of the national health agency, to whom much of the decision-making is deferred – has always been that this is a marathon. And, like a runner in a marathon, it is important to start at a pace you can maintain.

    "We wanted to implement measures and to take decisions that we thought could be sustainable for a long time," he says. "Locking down a society? You can't do that for too long.

    "We must be halfway through – we might have another six months with this pandemic – so let's wait for the final outcome."

    That means, also, that there will be six months more of the world poring over the data from his nation's experiment – using it for validation or refutation of their own pet theories in an endless global culture war.

    Last month, as the US stood on the brink of corona-pocalypse, Fox News ran a segment headlined, "What the US can learn from Sweden". On Lockdown Sceptics, the website started by Toby Young – Britain's reliably contrarian libertarian – Sweden is described as "Exhibit A for the prosecution". There was no need to add that the defendants are the leftie lockdown fanatics.

    So it is that Lofven, a socialist raised by foster parents, who never graduated from university and rose through politics thanks to the unions, finds himself in the unlikely position of being fêted abroad by elements of the political right, even as he battles criticism from his own anti-immigration right wing at home. Who is correct? Who has a slowly festering blue cupboard?

    Before outlining Sweden's position as case for the lockdown prosecution, here is the case for Sweden as a cautionary tale.

    In March, there was a prediction by a senior epidemiologist advising the Swedish government that, despite the international panic, the pandemic would be no worse than a bad flu season. At the upper end, as many as 2,000 would die. Then herd immunity would come, and the virus would go away. Countries could try to stop it, but there was little point: lockdown was delaying the inevitable.

    Lofven disputes, as British politicians do, that herd immunity was ever the aim, rather than a useful possible side-effect. But neither was the goal stopping the virus entirely. They wanted to flatten the curve, not eliminate it.

    So, in the argument of the Sweden-sceptics, the sort who were out every Thursday clapping "our" NHS or knitting tea cosies for nurses, death came. The virus was allowed to rip through the country, at one point giving it the highest death rate in the world. Despite not closing businesses or shops, the economy is still set to contract, but with thousands more deaths to show for it.

    Worse, the virus is still spreading and, unlike in countries that had lockdowns, vulnerable people still live in fear. And after all that pain, herd immunity has not come. According to antibody tests, at the end of April around 85 per cent of the population had not been infected. Public health officials think more may have "hidden immunity", but given we don't even know what immunity antibodies confer, that is – the lockdown lovers point out – quite a reach.

    Moreover, this is, as Lofven himself points out, just the midway point. Because the virus is still circulating and so, come the autumn, there is a greater reservoir of infection to launch a second wave. Is it any wonder that when the other Scandinavian nations initially reopened borders with each other, they kept crossings to Sweden closed? Last month, tired of waiting for coronavirus to be eliminated from her fiancé's home, a Norwegian bride married her Swedish groom at the border – the international restrictions forming an unusually rigid delineation between the two sets of guests.

    Dr Lena Einhorn, a virologist and one of the 22 signatories of the article that first criticised the government, says she has been mystified by the country's response – not just in not locking down, but also in resisting masks, in being slow at testing and in a resistance to the idea that asymptomatic people could spread it. A purely symptom-based quarantine policy looks less sensible if a large proportion of people don't get symptoms. "Sweden has still not implemented basic suppression or control measures that other countries have implemented," she says. "It's very hard to understand."

    She thinks the policies, taken together, only really make sense if the assumption is we will all get it eventually – including, later, in other countries.


    Lofven at an EU summit in Brussels last year. Photo / AP
    If this is the approach, then it is conceivable, over the course of the full pandemic, that other countries will fare as badly – having merely pushed back the virus until later. That is the rationale behind Lofven saying they wanted to impose measures that could last the course.

    "We were keen on using methods that were as sustainable as possible, that people would adhere to," he says. "And for a long time, because we told the population, this is going to stay for a long time. Prepare yourself – we're not talking weeks, we're talking months. And we're still talking months."

    But, Einhorn points out, how likely is it really that we will all end up the same? Sweden's approach, in the view of critics, is a fundamentally pessimistic one. It is a gamble that we will all suffer equally, that it's just a matter of when. This is a bet that science will stay static, that treatment will not improve, that public health officials have learnt nothing with the time lockdown bought them.

    "Why should you push this in front of you as far as possible, as other countries have done?" Einhorn asks. "First, to build up testing capacity, so if you get an outburst, you can immediately do contact tracing and stop it. The other reason is because of treatments and vaccines." If we are lucky, there will be a vaccine by Christmas. There are already treatments shown to work. She is sceptical of Lofven's approach, to say the least. "I will eat my hat if the other Nordic countries have the same death rates in a year."

    Nothing is certain. It's possible that one day Norway might see its pandemic plan as a foolhardy bet on a future that never came. For now, though, Sweden's neighbour has other problems. In this part of Scandinavia, all respiratory diseases have been crushed by the lockdown, and elderly Norwegians aren't getting the flu either. With too few deaths to support a funeral industry, Norway's undertakers have had to ask for a coronavirus bailout.

    Here, though, is the counterargument, the one practised by the US right, by British libertarians – but also by some British scientists suspicious of what, in their view, mathematicians and amateur programmers have wrought.

    By now, according to the modellers, there should be bodies in the streets of Stockholm. Using similar approaches to that taken by Imperial College in Britain, epidemiologists predicted 50,000 Swedish deaths and a healthcare system that stopped working.

    Lofven said he spoke to his advisers about this projection: "We thought it just didn't make sense."

    They were right. The health system coped. In Sweden, without a lockdown, the curve has indeed been flattened, the epidemic has been contained, while for all the individual tragedies, society has moved on. Death rates, today, are below the seasonal average. So far, it seems Lofven's experts were right to question the models.

    Is Sweden a cautionary tale or responsible exemplar? Or both?


    The total death rate may, Lofven concedes, be currently a lot more than, say, Norway: 568 per million versus 47 per million. It is also, Lofven does not need to point out, less than lockdown Britain – which is on 680 per million.

    As humans, we look for patterns in numbers and obvious causality. We find it easy to attribute an exceptional death rate to an exceptional policy. It is still not clear, though, why some countries do well and others less well. We want Sweden as an argument, not a nation. But life – and science – is not that simple.

    "We need to see why, for example, Belgium and Germany were quite close, but had two different developments." Belgium currently has the worst death rate in the world, with 849 deaths per million, compared with 110 in Germany. "Look at Portugal [170] and Spain [608]. We have the same situation – two countries close, two different developments. What are the reasons for that? Was there a difference at the very start that caused the difference?" Why, to this day, does Spain have a higher infection rate than Sweden?


    A woman and a man wearing face masks at Stockholm Central Station in March. Photo / Getty Images
    Sweden's high death rate may be because of not having a lockdown. Maybe, though, it is also because of holidays. At the end of February, Swedes have a school holiday for winter sports called sportlov. Many families use it as a time to go skiing – in Sweden, but also south, in the Alps. When the Swedish skiers returned from northern Italy they, unlike the British friends they met on the piste, were not asked to quarantine.

    "The truth is that we had people coming from other countries in Europe that also had the disease," says Lofven. "So we have a million people travelling in between these weeks. And that might have pushed the outbreak... We probably had a more dramatic increase of the pandemic at the start of the outbreak." Notably Stockholm's sportlov – it's a staggered holiday – was later than Gothenburg's, and Stockholm had a far worse outbreak.

    Meanwhile, a large chunk of deaths, we know for certain, come from care homes, where, as in many other countries, isolated outbreaks caused mass fatalities.

    Maybe, then, Sweden's approach is, actually, a fundamentally optimistic one. A number of Swedes I spoke to pointed to the same distinguishing feature of their society: trust. The government trusts citizens to behave responsibly, and in turn that's exactly what citizens do. The country is a mature alliance between citizen and state. "The way our society works is we decide upon laws, but we also have very strong [local] authorities with their own mandate, where the legislation is very clear we cannot interfere. That's illegal."

    Or as Donald Trump put it, marvelling somewhat, in Sweden, if they say stay in your house, "The people stay there automatically."

    So which view is correct? Sweden as cautionary tale or Sweden as responsible exemplar of a government in partnership with its people? The problem with these two arguments is not that they contradict each other, that one is true and the other false. It's that they don't. To an extent, both are true. The data you choose reveals as much about your own views as it does about Sweden.

    Sweden is used to being a political test case. Normally, though, it is invoked by the left – a moderate and prosperous socialist utopia of gender equality and generous welfare where migrants are welcomed.

    Lofven makes for an unlikely right-wing hero. When he was ten months old, he was placed in an orphanage, before being transferred to a foster home. "When I needed it the most, society supported me," he says. "They did so by making sure that when my biological mother could not take care of me, I got another chance and another family."

    That was not the only time that Sweden gave him another chance. He did not come into politics after a degree. Instead, he qualified as a welder. Then, as used to happen on the left in Britain, he worked his way up through the unions, until today when he is the most powerful man in the country.

    Again, this experience informed his views on the roles of government and of politics. "That is what happens with a strong society with the common goal to make sure that everybody, no matter the circumstances they were born with, should have the same possibilities."


    People stand in line without social distancing outside a restaurant in Gotland, Sweden, in July. Photo / Getty Images
    To him, this is exactly what the government response is about – a mature relationship with the people. "It has to be done together. We need a society where everybody knows in their heart that they have a place in this project to lay the future for society."

    In a year or maybe two, we will know the truth for certain. Until then, Lofven hopes we will defer judgment.

    "The best thing we can give to people is the truth: this is what happened; this is what went wrong; this is what we did. And this is how we can change to protect ourselves better."

    There is another Swedish word: lagom. It means just the right amount – not too much, not too little.

    Stefan Lofven has given me my allotted time. He steps away from his chair, briefly leaving that blank blue screen on his Zoom background. Then, out of shot, he returns to managing what he very much hopes is lagom.


    Written by: Tom Whipple
    © The Times of London
     
    #819     Aug 11, 2020
  10. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Critics Urge Sweden to Reboot Its Virus Strategy
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...eboot-virus-strategy-amid-fears-of-resurgence

    Critics of Sweden’s coronavirus strategy say now is the time to beef up measures to avoid a renewed outbreak after a sharp drop in the rate of infections and deaths during the summer.

    While the toll of the virus in Sweden has been severe, with fatalities approaching 6,000 in a country of 10 million, the number of serious cases has steadily declined in recent months and July 30 appears to have been the first day since March when no one succumbed to the virus.

    Some scientists and academics say the improving situation has created a window of opportunity to correct the failings of the past.

    “The beginning of autumn may be crucial for the corona pandemic’s continued development in the country,” Goran K. Hansson, the general-secretary of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, wrote in an opinion piece with economics professor Lars Calmfors.

    They argue a “a proper reboot” of the contagion strategy is needed using measures that the Swedish health authorities have so far been skeptical of, including face masks in public spaces and putting travelers from high-risk areas in quarantine even if they show no symptoms.

    For now at least state epidemiologist Anders Tegnell remains committed to his country’s policy of sustainable restrictions, which continue to draw scrutiny as countries around the world again impose lockdowns amid new waves of infections.

    But the architect of the Swedish response has admitted a need for more testing and quicker tracing, something his critics are also pushing for.

    “When we go sort of into the second phase, the rapid finding of what could be a potential cluster is going to be crucial,” Tegnell said in an interview with The Local.

    Even though the number of deaths in Sweden has dropped to an average of about two per day from a peak of almost 100 in mid-April, health experts fear what may happen when vacationers return to work and schools reopen, especially after an uptick of infections among people in their twenties.

    “There are some warning signs that we may be heading in the wrong direction, especially when it comes to the rather large increase we are seeing among young adults,” Tegnell told reporters in Stockholm earlier this week.
     
    #820     Aug 12, 2020