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In reply to the discussion: 'Grave concern' over Covid in Europe as German cases soar [View all]BumRushDaShow
(128,844 posts)41. Over a year ago
we saw a similar situation of mitigation vs no mitigation in a "pre-vaccination" situation, where Sweden had little or lockdowns, let alone any masking or social distancing mandates (only recommendations). They were initially "praised" by the media for a "success" until that flawed strategy was finally laid to rest.
October 29, 202111:25 AM EDT Last Updated 7 days ago
World
Sweden acted too slowly as pandemic swept country, commission finds
By Johan Ahlander and Niklas Pollard
STOCKHOLM, Oct 29 (Reuters) - Sweden's response to the spread of coronavirus was too slow and preparations to handle a pandemic were insufficient, a commission investigating the country's response to COVID-19 said on Friday. Sweden's strategy, shunning lockdowns and measures such as widespread use of face masks and only gradually tightening curbs, made the country an outlier in the first year of the pandemic when many countries across Europe chose to implement far tougher restrictions.The country kept most schools, businesses, bars and restaurants open in startling contrast with a locked-down Europe, relying on voluntary recommendations even as its death toll rapidly eclipsed those if its Nordic neighbours.
Meanwhile, mass testing for the virus and contact tracing only got underway after a first wave which killed over two thousand people in the nation's nursing homes had all but petered out. The commission said it would address Sweden's no-lockdown strategy in its final report, but that its preliminary findings showed that measures were introduced late both in relation to the country's Nordic neighbours and the spread of the virus in Sweden during the spring of 2020. "Sweden's handling of the pandemic has been marked by a slowness of response," the commission said.
"The initial disease prevention and control measures were insufficient to stop or even substantially limit the spread of the virus in the country." The commission, appointed by the government amid pressure from parliament, also noted that it had taken "far too long" to build sufficient testing capacity with initially only targeted groups, such as healthcare staff, being tested.Health Minister Lena Hallengren told Reuters she would wait for the final report before assessing the overall handling, but said that there were things that could have been done better."We have started work in many areas, such as preparing a new communicable diseases act. We are, of course, trying to learn in many areas from this crisis," she said.
(snip)
Mass testing took months to get up and running amid discussions over responsibility and funding, a delay the commission labelled "a complete failure", while it noted the health agency had adopted some tougher measures during the second wave which it had rejected during the first, likely sowing confusion and undermining compliance. Sweden has recorded more than 15,000 deaths from coronavirus, many times the per capita level of its Nordic neighbours that implemented tougher restrictions, but still lower than in most European countries that locked down tightly, such as Britain. Its pandemic strategy has been controversial at home and abroad. Critics have called it reckless and cruel but the approach has also earned praise for being more sustainable and business-friendly and as a model for living with the virus as it becomes endemic.
(snip)
https://www.reuters.com/world/sweden-acted-too-slowly-pandemic-hit-commission-finds-2021-10-29/
World
Sweden acted too slowly as pandemic swept country, commission finds
By Johan Ahlander and Niklas Pollard
STOCKHOLM, Oct 29 (Reuters) - Sweden's response to the spread of coronavirus was too slow and preparations to handle a pandemic were insufficient, a commission investigating the country's response to COVID-19 said on Friday. Sweden's strategy, shunning lockdowns and measures such as widespread use of face masks and only gradually tightening curbs, made the country an outlier in the first year of the pandemic when many countries across Europe chose to implement far tougher restrictions.The country kept most schools, businesses, bars and restaurants open in startling contrast with a locked-down Europe, relying on voluntary recommendations even as its death toll rapidly eclipsed those if its Nordic neighbours.
Meanwhile, mass testing for the virus and contact tracing only got underway after a first wave which killed over two thousand people in the nation's nursing homes had all but petered out. The commission said it would address Sweden's no-lockdown strategy in its final report, but that its preliminary findings showed that measures were introduced late both in relation to the country's Nordic neighbours and the spread of the virus in Sweden during the spring of 2020. "Sweden's handling of the pandemic has been marked by a slowness of response," the commission said.
"The initial disease prevention and control measures were insufficient to stop or even substantially limit the spread of the virus in the country." The commission, appointed by the government amid pressure from parliament, also noted that it had taken "far too long" to build sufficient testing capacity with initially only targeted groups, such as healthcare staff, being tested.Health Minister Lena Hallengren told Reuters she would wait for the final report before assessing the overall handling, but said that there were things that could have been done better."We have started work in many areas, such as preparing a new communicable diseases act. We are, of course, trying to learn in many areas from this crisis," she said.
(snip)
Mass testing took months to get up and running amid discussions over responsibility and funding, a delay the commission labelled "a complete failure", while it noted the health agency had adopted some tougher measures during the second wave which it had rejected during the first, likely sowing confusion and undermining compliance. Sweden has recorded more than 15,000 deaths from coronavirus, many times the per capita level of its Nordic neighbours that implemented tougher restrictions, but still lower than in most European countries that locked down tightly, such as Britain. Its pandemic strategy has been controversial at home and abroad. Critics have called it reckless and cruel but the approach has also earned praise for being more sustainable and business-friendly and as a model for living with the virus as it becomes endemic.
(snip)
https://www.reuters.com/world/sweden-acted-too-slowly-pandemic-hit-commission-finds-2021-10-29/
As a note, Sweden has around the same population (10.4 million) as the state of Georgia (10.6 million).
There was an interesting study published by Nature over the summer comparing the strategies deployed by the UK, Sweden, and Norway and how the timing of implementing certain strategies may have lead to different outcomes - https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-021-95699-9
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I remember when I was called a "doomer" for expressing concern about the delta variant...
bluewater
Nov 2021
#1
Its all on him but, like those nonchalent killers you see on the crime shows,
Peregrine Took
Nov 2021
#5
yeah mob bosses don't give a shit. And that's what the Don is. Sure set the tone for where we are.
Evolve Dammit
Nov 2021
#6
So a Massive pandemic among UNVACCINATED...these uns will kill us all still.
Alexander Of Assyria
Nov 2021
#20
If they're running out of Hospital beds, the cases are severe. Would not hospitalize mild cases.
Fla Dem
Nov 2021
#19
German government claims it's mostly unvaccinated people being hospitalized
IronLionZion
Nov 2021
#26
Well sad @global1. And we never seem to acknowledge that the US will follow suit of what's
iluvtennis
Nov 2021
#11
They have been watching the UK as a "canary" (and test bed for mitigation or lack thereof)
BumRushDaShow
Nov 2021
#9
Article doesn't say, but it does mention that it is "among the unvaccinated".
NYC Liberal
Nov 2021
#21
Here in BC we are at around 85% fully vaccinated, but cases have exploded among unvaxed
Fiendish Thingy
Nov 2021
#22
Wonder where they are in that every 2 months surge graph? Are we due again? N/T
Shanti Shanti Shanti
Nov 2021
#37