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Has Sweden Found the Right Solution to the Coronavirus? Unlike other countries, it has so far avoided both isolation and economic ruin
National Review ^ | 04/06/2020 | By JOHN FUND & JOEL HAY

Posted on 04/06/2020 9:15:38 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

If the COVID-19 pandemic tails off in a few weeks, months before the alarmists claim it will, they will probably pivot immediately and pat themselves on the back for the brilliant social-distancing controls that they imposed on the world. They will claim that their heroic recommendations averted total calamity. Unfortunately, they will be wrong; and Sweden, which has done almost no mandated social distancing, will probably prove them wrong.

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Lots of people are rushing to discredit Sweden’s approach, which relies more on calibrated precautions and isolating only the most vulnerable than on imposing a full lockdown. While gatherings of more than 50 people are prohibited and high schools and colleges are closed, Sweden has kept its borders open as well as its preschools, grade schools, bars, restaurants, parks, and shops.

President Trump has no use for Sweden’s nuanced approach. Last Wednesday, he smeared it in a spectacular fashion by saying he’d heard that Sweden “gave it a shot, and they saw things that were really frightening, and they went immediately to shutting down the country.” He and the public-health experts who told him this were wrong on both counts and would do better to question their approach. Johan Giesecke, Sweden’s former chief epidemiologist and now adviser to the Swedish Health Agency, says that other nations “have taken political, unconsidered actions” that are not justified by the facts.

In the rush to lock down nations and, as a result, crater their economies, no one has addressed this simple yet critical question: How do we know social-isolation controls actually work? And even if they do work for some infectious epidemics, do they work for COVID-19? And even if they work for this novel coronavirus, do they have to be implemented by a certain point in the epidemic? Or are they locking down the barn door after the horses are long gone?

In theory, less physical interaction might slow the rate of new infections. But without a good understanding of how long COVID-19 viral particles survive in air, in water, and on contact surfaces, even that is speculative. Without reliable information on what proportion of the population has already been exposed and successfully fought off the coronavirus, it’s worth questioning the value of social-isolation controls. It is possible that the fastest and safest way to “flatten the curve” is to allow young people to mix normally while requiring only the frail and sick to remain isolated.

This is, in fact, the first time we have quarantined healthy people rather than quarantining the sick and vulnerable. As Fredrik Erixon, the director of the European Centre for International Political Economy in Brussels, wrote in The Spectator (U.K.) last week: “The theory of lockdown, after all, is pretty niche, deeply illiberal — and, until now, untested. It’s not Sweden that’s conducting a mass experiment. It’s everyone else.”

We’ve posed these simple questions to many highly trained infectious-disease doctors, epidemiologists, mathematical disease-modelers, and other smart, educated professionals. It turns out that, while you need proof beyond a reasonable doubt to convict a person of theft and throw them in jail, you don’t need any actual evidence (much less proof) to put millions of people into a highly invasive and burdensome lockdown with no end in sight and nothing to prevent the lockdown from being reimposed at the whim of public-health officials. Is this rational?

When we asked what evidence is available to support the utility of quarantine and social isolation, academics point to the Diamond Princess cruise ship, with 700 COVID-19 passenger cases and eight deaths. But the ship is an artificially engineered, densely packed container of humans that bears little resemblance to living conditions in most countries.

The other major evidence academics often cite is the course run by the 1918 swine flu, which swept the globe 102 years ago and was not a coronavirus. Philadelphia did not practice social distancing during the 1918 pandemic, but St. Louis did and had a death rate lower than Philadelphia’s. But how is that relevant to today’s crisis? Apart from the post hoc, ergo propter hoc nature of the argument, a key difference was that the GIs returning from World War I Europe who were carrying the swine-flu virus couldn’t fly nonstop from Paris to St. Louis. They had to land at East Coast ports such as Philadelphia. It’s therefore not surprising that the sick GIs rested and convalesced while spreading the virus on the East Coast, and they got better before continuing to St. Louis and other interior cities.

Basing the entire architecture of social distancing on the evidence from the 1918 swine flu makes no sense, especially when that architecture causes significant destruction in the lives and livelihoods of most of the American population.

But the social-isolation advocates frantically grasp at straws to support shutting down the world. It bothers them that there is one country in the world that hasn’t shut down and that hasn’t socially isolated its population. It bothers them because when this coronavirus epidemic is over, they would probably love to conclude that social isolation worked.

Sweden has courageously decided not to endorse a harsh quarantine, and consequently it hasn’t forced its residents into lockdown. “The strategy in Sweden is to focus on social distancing among the known risk groups, like the elderly. We try to use evidence-based measurements,” Emma Frans, a doctor in epidemiology at Sweden’s Karolinska Institute, told Euronews. “We try to adjust everyday life. The Swedish plan is to implement measurements that you can practice for a long time.”

The problem with lockdowns is that “you tire the system out,” Anders Tegnell, Sweden’s chief epidemiologist, told the Guardian. “You can’t keep a lockdown going for months — it’s impossible.” He told Britain’s Daily Mail: “We can’t kill all our services. And unemployed people are a great threat to public health. It’s a factor you need to think about.”

If social isolation worked, wouldn’t Sweden, a Nordic country of 10.1 million people, be seeing the number of COVID-19 cases skyrocket into the tens of thousands, blowing past the numbers in Italy or New York City? As of today, there are 401 reported COVID-19 deaths in Sweden.

The really good news is that in Sweden’s ICU census, which is updated every 30 minutes nationwide, admissions to every ICU in the country are flat or declining, and they have been for a week. As of this writing (based on currently available data), most of Sweden’s ICU cases today are elderly, and 77 percent have underlying conditions such as heart disease, respiratory disease, kidney disease, and diabetes. Moreover, there hasn’t been a single pediatric ICU case or death in Sweden — so much for the benefits of shutting down schools everywhere else. There are only 25 COVID-19 ICU admissions among all Swedes under the age of 30.

Sweden is developing herd immunity by refusing to panic. By not requiring social isolation, Sweden’s young people spread the virus, mostly asymptomatically, as is supposed to happen in a normal flu season. They will generate protective antibodies that make it harder and harder for the Wuhan virus to reach and infect the frail and elderly who have serious underlying conditions. For perspective, the current COVID-19 death rate in Sweden (40 deaths per million of population) is substantially lower than the Swedish death rate in a normal flu season (in 2018, for instance, about 80 per million of population).

Compare that with the situation to Switzerland, a similar small European country, which has 8.5 million people. Switzerland is practicing strict social isolation. Yet Switzerland reports 715 cumulative Wuhan-virus deaths as of today, for a death rate nearly double the number in Sweden. What about Norway, another Nordic country that shares a 1,000-mile open border with Sweden, with a language and culture very similar to Sweden’s? Norway (population 5.4 million) has fewer reported COVID-19 deaths (71) than Sweden but a substantially higher rate of coronavirus ICU admissions.

On Friday, one of us spoke with Ulf Persson in his office at the Swedish Institute for Health Economics. He said that everyone he knows is calm and steady, behaving with more caution than normal, following such government-mandated social controls as a 50-person limit on gatherings and only sit-down service at bars and restaurants. Persson estimates that the Swedish economy will drop about 4 percent because of the global economic shutdowns. But that’s nothing compared with the Great Depression unemployment levels of 32 percent that the U.S. Federal Reserve Board of St. Louis recently forecast for the United States.

Nature’s got this one, folks. We’ve been coping with new viruses for untold generations. The best way is to allow the young and healthy — those for whom the virus is rarely fatal — to develop antibodies and herd immunity to protect the frail and sick. As time passes, it will become clearer that social-isolation measures like those in Switzerland and Norway accomplish very little in terms of reducing fatalities or disease, though they crater local and national economies — increasing misery, pain, death, and disease from other causes as people’s lives are upended and futures are destroyed.

John Fund is a columnist for National Review and has reported frequently from Sweden. Joel Hay is a professor in the department of Pharmaceutical Economics and Policy at the University of Southern California. The author of more than 600 peer-reviewed scientific articles and reports, he has collaborated with the Swedish Institute for Health Economics for nearly 40 years.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: coronavirus; herdimmunity; sweden
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A street with less pedestrian traffic than usual as a result of the coronavirus outbreak in Stockholm, Sweden, April 1, 2020


1 posted on 04/06/2020 9:15:38 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

We’ve got 33 times their population. 401 deaths * 33 =13,233, or over 30% more deaths than we’ve had per capita. And they don’t have any mass petri dishes on the scale of New York City where most of our deaths have happened.


2 posted on 04/06/2020 9:23:37 AM PDT by Our man in washington
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To: SeekAndFind

Doesn’t appear to be working as well as the original article would make it appear.

Try googling sweden coronavirus. Multiple articles criticizing swedish approach. Use chrome to look for just the last 24 hours. According to the below, Sweden to take new restrictions.

Typical:
https://www.aa.com.tr/en/europe/covid-19-sweden-s-less-stringent-measures-to-change-/1794325


3 posted on 04/06/2020 9:26:15 AM PDT by DugwayDuke ("A man hears what he wants to hear and disregards the rest")
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To: SeekAndFind

Sweden has the lowest population density of any European country.

They are also second guessing whether they should have locked down and may implemnent a lockdown soon.

They also did close high schools and Universities and limited gatherings to no more than 50 people.


4 posted on 04/06/2020 9:26:52 AM PDT by DannyTN
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To: DugwayDuke

But they will get through this quicker as herd immunity will kick in sooner. Early death rates are not everything.


5 posted on 04/06/2020 9:30:52 AM PDT by impimp
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To: DannyTN

The overarching goal in sweden seems to be anything that speeds up the complete demographic replacement is a good thing.


6 posted on 04/06/2020 9:32:47 AM PDT by Black Agnes
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To: Our man in washington

Apples to apples...Stockholm, 1.5 million, to comparable US cities or even smaller ones. Stockholm has less cases and deaths than Denver, Cleveland, New Orleans, Detroit....


7 posted on 04/06/2020 9:34:31 AM PDT by Kazan
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To: impimp

They are to the 72,636 people who have died.


8 posted on 04/06/2020 9:34:34 AM PDT by philetus (Keep doing what you always do and you'll eventually get what you deserve)
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To: SeekAndFind

They still have an economy? Besides Ikea?


9 posted on 04/06/2020 9:38:20 AM PDT by Huskrrrr
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To: philetus

See my other posts - death rates are inflated as Covid is not primary cause of death.


10 posted on 04/06/2020 9:40:17 AM PDT by impimp
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To: SeekAndFind

Why don’t they compare Sweden to their neighbors...Norway, Finland, and Denmark?

Sweden 47 deaths/million
Norway 14 deaths/million
Finland 5 deaths/million
Denmark 33 deaths/million

Yeah, they’re doing great. Oh yeah, as of this morning the US had 30 deaths per million.


11 posted on 04/06/2020 9:44:51 AM PDT by Lakewood
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To: Huskrrrr

Volvo is still making cars. But it’s owned by the Chinese.


12 posted on 04/06/2020 9:54:22 AM PDT by SeekAndFind (look at Michigan, it will)
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To: Our man in washington

>>>We’ve got 33 times their population. 401 deaths * 33 =13,233, or over 30% more deaths than we’ve had per capita

They added another 76 deaths today, or an equivalent of 2500 U.S. deaths.


13 posted on 04/06/2020 9:56:28 AM PDT by oincobx
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To: SeekAndFind; All
Sweden has the population roughly found in Los Angeles metro area.

Trump addressed this issue the other day by pointing out the USA has many different "countries" inside in terms of population densities so there's not a 1:1 comparison.

People have talked about South Korea and some others that are relatively tiny by comparison.

14 posted on 04/06/2020 9:59:36 AM PDT by newzjunkey (Vote Giant Meteor in 2020)
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To: SeekAndFind

..... Sweden knows that the death rate is mainly among the elderly ..... which in better times they have considered to be a financial burden upon society .... This strategy of theirs will help cull to population of that burden.


15 posted on 04/06/2020 10:09:38 AM PDT by R_Kangel ("A nation of sheep will beget a nation ruled by wolves")
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To: oincobx; Kazan; Lakewood; Our man in washington
Please check out this link where I took select country daily death totals, standardized the totals relative to the US population, and set Day 1 as right before the totals hit 1,000.

Sweden is higher than the US on Day 11 but not by as much as the Netherlands (which is trying the Swedish approach), and their rate of growth is slowing. Of courses we slammed the brakes so I'd HOPE we are lower; it's a costly approach but I get the intent.

More to come.

16 posted on 04/06/2020 10:12:14 AM PDT by DoodleBob (Gravity's waiting period is about 9.8 m/s^2)
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To: SeekAndFind

The deaths in Sweden are going to be a nightmare.


17 posted on 04/06/2020 10:19:22 AM PDT by kaehurowing
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To: SeekAndFind

These guys sound like anti-Trumpers making passive-aggressive swipes at our president.


18 posted on 04/06/2020 10:24:35 AM PDT by reasonisfaith (What are the implications if the Resurrection of Christ is a true event in history?)
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To: SeekAndFind

It is kind of interesting, though, that Sweden is one of the countries always held up by liberals as showing the superior humanity of putting people before profit. And here they are now, saying the economy is more important than the health issue. Hmm. Whodathunk?


19 posted on 04/06/2020 11:05:32 AM PDT by A_perfect_lady (The greatest wealth is to live content with little. -Plato)
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To: SeekAndFind

Swedes are smart, except when it comes to electing feminists to government, and allowing bearded savages to immigrate.


20 posted on 04/06/2020 11:58:12 AM PDT by I want the USA back (If free speech is taken away, dumb and silent we are led, like sheep to the slaughter: G Washington)
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