Swedish coronavirus model under fire as deaths rise

Sweden’s softer approach to containing the new coronavirus was already an outlier in Europe and is coming under even more scrutiny as death rates leap ahead of its Nordic neighbours. As of Wednesday, a total of 1,203 people had died from nearly 12,000 confirmed cases of COVID-19 — a far higher rate than Finland, Denmark and Norway, which have all instituted more restrictive containment measures. “The authorities and the government stupidly did not believe that the epidemic would reach Sweden at all,” Bo Lundback, professor of epidemiology at the University of Gothenburg, told AFP.

In contrast to Nordic neighbours and most of Europe, Sweden has not imposed extraordinary lockdown orders. Instead, it has called for citizens to take responsibility and follow social distancing guidelines along with stronger measures such as banning gatherings of more than 50 people and halting visits to retirement homes. Despite international attention and domestic debate, the government has maintained its course, taking its cue from its expert authority, the Public Health Agency.

Lundback and 21 other researchers urged the government to reconsider and institute “rapid and radical measures” in a joint article in Dagens Nyheter newspaper on Tuesday. “Sweden was poorly or even not at all prepared,” Lundback told AFP. But officials insist their plan is sustainable in the long-term, rejecting drastic short-term measures as too ineffective to justify their impact on society.

Last week, health officials announced 40 percent of deaths in the Stockholm region — the epicentre of the epidemic — could be traced to retirement and care homes. Even with measures targeting these institutions, half of the retirement homes in the capital have had cases of the virus. One-third of the country’s municipalities had reported cases in retirement homes, public radio reported in early April.

Source: Digital Journal

Author: Tuula Pohjola