Did Sweden end up taking the best approach?

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fig96
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Beware of Doug said:

fig96 said:

Beware of Doug said:

HotardAg07 said:



Interesting
Saying those graphs are the same or similar is just stupid.
It doesn't say the graphs are the same. It says the two cities have nearly the exact same adjustment in driving, walking, and transit use, and they're at most a 2% difference from each other.
Look at the driving line, Sweden bottoms out at around ~33%, Nashville at 70%. Just because the lines might intersect at a point doesn't mean they are similar. At some point in the last few years I attained the same muscle mass of Randy Macho Man Savage. It doesn't mean we are similar, it just means he has been decomposing for 9 years.


Also, I have worked in both towns, and the entire comparing of Nashville and Stockholm is just silly. One is on archipelago which changes a lot of how you travel in and out of the city. Sweden also goes through a big transformation of activity from March to May as they go from no day light and freezing, to a ton of day light. Also comparing a European country and Tennessee on biking habits is like comparing the swimming habits of a duck and a cinder block.

Ok...it still doesn't say the graphs are the same.

It's saying the percentage change in people's habits is almost identical, which it is.
Another Doug
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Quote:

Ok...it still doesn't say the graphs are the same.

It's saying the percentage change in people's habits is almost identical, which it is.
Thanks for clearing that up Kellyanne
fig96
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Beware of Doug said:

Quote:

Ok...it still doesn't say the graphs are the same.

It's saying the percentage change in people's habits is almost identical, which it is.
Thanks for clearing that up Kellyanne
Not sure how highlighting portions of two sentences proves anything, but sure.
NASAg03
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fig96 said:

Beware of Doug said:

fig96 said:

Beware of Doug said:

HotardAg07 said:



Interesting
Saying those graphs are the same or similar is just stupid.
It doesn't say the graphs are the same. It says the two cities have nearly the exact same adjustment in driving, walking, and transit use, and they're at most a 2% difference from each other.
Look at the driving line, Sweden bottoms out at around ~33%, Nashville at 70%. Just because the lines might intersect at a point doesn't mean they are similar. At some point in the last few years I attained the same muscle mass of Randy Macho Man Savage. It doesn't mean we are similar, it just means he has been decomposing for 9 years.


Also, I have worked in both towns, and the entire comparing of Nashville and Stockholm is just silly. One is on archipelago which changes a lot of how you travel in and out of the city. Sweden also goes through a big transformation of activity from March to May as they go from no day light and freezing, to a ton of day light. Also comparing a European country and Tennessee on biking habits is like comparing the swimming habits of a duck and a cinder block.

Ok...it still doesn't say the graphs are the same.

It's saying the percentage change in people's habits is almost identical, which it is.
The final percentage numbers are almost identical, and that's it. That's only because you have no idea where they got those numbers from. Averages? Over what span? Single data points taken May 1? Compared to what past point?

Those plots have the same trend. No ***** Both cities slowed down. But the Nashville plot is vastly different. It also showed much greater swings prior to lock-down, and during the middle of lockdown. Why didn't they mention those extremes, or compare percentages from selected weeks at the extremes? That would have told a way different story.

The changes are similar, but the habits and extremes of those changes are not identical in the least bit.
Mike Shaw - Class of '03
fig96
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NASAg03 said:

fig96 said:

Beware of Doug said:

fig96 said:

Beware of Doug said:

HotardAg07 said:



Interesting
Saying those graphs are the same or similar is just stupid.
It doesn't say the graphs are the same. It says the two cities have nearly the exact same adjustment in driving, walking, and transit use, and they're at most a 2% difference from each other.
Look at the driving line, Sweden bottoms out at around ~33%, Nashville at 70%. Just because the lines might intersect at a point doesn't mean they are similar. At some point in the last few years I attained the same muscle mass of Randy Macho Man Savage. It doesn't mean we are similar, it just means he has been decomposing for 9 years.


Also, I have worked in both towns, and the entire comparing of Nashville and Stockholm is just silly. One is on archipelago which changes a lot of how you travel in and out of the city. Sweden also goes through a big transformation of activity from March to May as they go from no day light and freezing, to a ton of day light. Also comparing a European country and Tennessee on biking habits is like comparing the swimming habits of a duck and a cinder block.

Ok...it still doesn't say the graphs are the same.

It's saying the percentage change in people's habits is almost identical, which it is.
The final percentage numbers are almost identical, and that's it. That's only because you have no idea where they got those numbers from. Averages? Over what span? Single data points taken May 1? Compared to what past point?

Those plots have the same trend. No ***** Both cities slowed down. But the Nashville plot is vastly different. It also showed much greater swings prior to lock-down, and during the middle of lockdown. Why didn't they mention those extremes, or compare percentages from selected weeks at the extremes? That would have told a way different story.

The changes are similar, but the habits and extremes of those changes are not identical in the least bit.
Because it's a tweet and not a news story?

Data is from Apple Mobility Trends which can researched further here, it's actually super interesting to look at.

https://www.apple.com/covid19/mobility
Knucklesammich
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Another point to make is that Android devices are far more prevalent in Europe than they are in the US. I'd like to see this normalized.

On mobile so hard to grab the links but android market share in Sweden is 51-52 percent and it is 38 percent in the US.

I'd expect a drop in movement during a pandemic, it makes sense but grabbing a data point excluding 12-15% more of one user base is problematic imo.

Also I asked the question of analysis on how fast the other Eruropean countries express begin to rebound. Given that it's not in the article it doesn't drive the narrative that Sweden's approach is wrong.

I think Sweden chose to balance isolation and realistic economic requirements.
PJYoung
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DadHammer said:

Also Norway and Finland are not counting the elderly deaths the same as Sweden lowering their death numbers dramatically.

Not doubting you but can you cite a source on that?
oragator
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Was just looking at the numbers for Stockholm, their death rate is around .15 across the population. That is higher than the state of NY, but less than NYC. And that's in a city of less than a million people, it isn't exactly densely populated by US standards. It has 13k people per square mile, NYC has 27k.
Not sure that's a ballpark very many would be comfortable in.
Keegan99
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oragator said:

Was just looking at the numbers for Stockholm, their death rate is around .15 across the population. That is higher than the state of NY, but less than NYC. And that's in a city of less than a million people, it isn't exactly densely populated by US standards. It has 13k people per square mile, NYC has 27k.
Not sure that's a ballpark very many would be comfortable in.

What?

13k is VERY dense by US standards. Only three major US cities have densities at or above 13k. NYC is one. Then SF is a bit above at 18k. And Boston is right at 13k.

Every other major US city is below that number. Most by a wide margin.
oragator
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Fair enough, I was meaning to compare to NY and why their numbers were lower than NYC.
Keegan99
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Age data from Sweden.

More deaths from those 90+ than all of those younger than 70.
Pumpkinhead
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Sweden certainly seems to have a lot more deaths than immediate neighbors Finland and Norway.

So how in the end is somebody going to grade whether Sweden economically fared worse or better than Finland or Norway, making the 5X+ extra deaths that they incurred 'worth it'? Come back a year from now and look at unemployment rates, GDP retraction in 2020 compared to 2019, increased national debt?
Squadron7
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Keegan99 said:



Age data from Sweden.

More deaths from those 90+ than all of those younger than 70.

I don't know what Uppgift saknas is...but it sounds bad.
KlinkerAg11
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I loled at this
RandyAg98
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Am I the only one that did a Swedish to English google translate for Uppgift saknas?
NASAg03
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Pumpkinhead said:

Sweden certainly seems to have a lot more deaths than immediate neighbors Finland and Norway.

So how in the end is somebody going to grade whether Sweden economically fared worse or better than Finland or Norway, making the 5X+ extra deaths that they incurred 'worth it'? Come back a year from now and look at unemployment rates, GDP retraction in 2020 compared to 2019, increased national debt?
In the end, we'll have numbers included from second waves, and watching Finland and Norway spike when they open up. We'll also have death numbers due to lockdown and not directly caused from contracting the virus (avoiding medical care for non-covid health issues).

And even if Sweden does have more deaths, they can quite easily compare deaths to quality of life and economics and personal well-being, as just that's already done for everything else in life that requires a balance between those things: speed limits, traffic signs and indicators, gun control, extreme sports, living in areas of frequent natural disasters, dangerous jobs, etc.
Mike Shaw - Class of '03
California Ag 90
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NASAg03 said:

Pumpkinhead said:

Sweden certainly seems to have a lot more deaths than immediate neighbors Finland and Norway.

So how in the end is somebody going to grade whether Sweden economically fared worse or better than Finland or Norway, making the 5X+ extra deaths that they incurred 'worth it'? Come back a year from now and look at unemployment rates, GDP retraction in 2020 compared to 2019, increased national debt?
In the end, we'll have numbers included from second waves, and watching Finland and Norway spike when they open up. We'll also have death numbers due to lockdown and not directly caused from contracting the virus (avoiding medical care for non-covid health issues).

And even if Sweden does have more deaths, they can quite easily compare deaths to quality of life and economics and personal well-being, as just that's already done for everything else in life that requires a balance between those things: speed limits, traffic signs and indicators, gun control, extreme sports, living in areas of frequent natural disasters, dangerous jobs, etc.
and we can again point out the population density in the principal urban area of each of the three countries, as done several pages back in this now-looping thread.

Stockholm: 13K per sq mile
Helsinki: 3.6K per sq mile
Oslo: 3.9K per sq mile

We're from North California, and South Alabam
and little towns all around this land...
Pumpkinhead
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NASAg03 said:

Pumpkinhead said:

Sweden certainly seems to have a lot more deaths than immediate neighbors Finland and Norway.

So how in the end is somebody going to grade whether Sweden economically fared worse or better than Finland or Norway, making the 5X+ extra deaths that they incurred 'worth it'? Come back a year from now and look at unemployment rates, GDP retraction in 2020 compared to 2019, increased national debt?
In the end, we'll have numbers included from second waves, and watching Finland and Norway spike when they open up. We'll also have death numbers due to lockdown and not directly caused from contracting the virus (avoiding medical care for non-covid health issues).

And even if Sweden does have more deaths, they can quite easily compare deaths to quality of life and economics and personal well-being, as just that's already done for everything else in life that requires a balance between those things: speed limits, traffic signs and indicators, gun control, extreme sports, living in areas of frequent natural disasters, dangerous jobs, etc.
Compare quality of life for only a short-term period? Finland and Norway are not going to stay quarantined permanently. Finland for example has announced they are reopening schools starting May 13, and restaurants and theatres and so forth starting June 1, seems will basically be reopened back to same state as Sweden is within another month.

Say Finland doesn't have any significant 'second wave' of COVID. They shutdown completely though for 3 months unlike Sweden, and had about 20% of the total deaths per capita that Sweden did during that period. So the average Swedish person having restaurants and bars and schools open during March, April, & May of 2020 would still have been worth the 5X more deaths? How do you price the tradeoff in something like this? It seems really difficult to do.
California Ag 90
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Pumpkinhead said:

NASAg03 said:

Pumpkinhead said:

Sweden certainly seems to have a lot more deaths than immediate neighbors Finland and Norway.

So how in the end is somebody going to grade whether Sweden economically fared worse or better than Finland or Norway, making the 5X+ extra deaths that they incurred 'worth it'? Come back a year from now and look at unemployment rates, GDP retraction in 2020 compared to 2019, increased national debt?
In the end, we'll have numbers included from second waves, and watching Finland and Norway spike when they open up. We'll also have death numbers due to lockdown and not directly caused from contracting the virus (avoiding medical care for non-covid health issues).

And even if Sweden does have more deaths, they can quite easily compare deaths to quality of life and economics and personal well-being, as just that's already done for everything else in life that requires a balance between those things: speed limits, traffic signs and indicators, gun control, extreme sports, living in areas of frequent natural disasters, dangerous jobs, etc.
Compare quality of life for only a short-term period? Finland and Norway are not going to stay quarantined permanently. Finland for example has announced they are reopening schools starting May 13, and restaurants and theatres and so forth starting June 1, seems will basically be reopened back to same state as Sweden is within another month.

Say Finland doesn't have any significant 'second wave' of COVID. They shutdown completely though for 3 months unlike Sweden, and had about 20% of the total deaths per capita that Sweden did during that period. So the average Swedish person having restaurants and bars and schools open during March, April, & May of 2020 would still have been worth the 5X more deaths? How do you price the tradeoff in something like this? It seems really difficult to do.
please comment as well on population density in each country, given your affinity for statistics i'd welcome your views on that as well.

you seem to fully attribute differences in fatality rates to public policy, ignoring very different population densities in each of the three countries.

We're from North California, and South Alabam
and little towns all around this land...
PJYoung
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The video story is good, the written story is a kind of behind the scenes take.

https://www.cnn.com/2020/05/06/europe/sweden-coronavirus-diary-shukla/index.html
NASAg03
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The written story is typical CNN scare tactics. From takeoff to landing. Literally. This isn't the plague, yet they love acting like it is.

"If I sound jealous, it's because I was. Yet, I was also conflicted. How nice it would have been to wander over, pull up a chair and enjoy a beer. But I also knew the death rate in Sweden is now significantly higher than many other countries in Europe, with 2,500 dead.
Sweden did not close down in the way much of Europe did, but it has a higher death rate.

"They used to say there was safety in numbers. But the counts of dead and infected across Europe suggest the complete opposite."

https://www.cnn.com/2020/05/06/europe/sweden-coronavirus-diary-shukla/index.html
Mike Shaw - Class of '03
Pumpkinhead
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California Ag 90 said:

Pumpkinhead said:

NASAg03 said:

Pumpkinhead said:

Sweden certainly seems to have a lot more deaths than immediate neighbors Finland and Norway.

So how in the end is somebody going to grade whether Sweden economically fared worse or better than Finland or Norway, making the 5X+ extra deaths that they incurred 'worth it'? Come back a year from now and look at unemployment rates, GDP retraction in 2020 compared to 2019, increased national debt?
In the end, we'll have numbers included from second waves, and watching Finland and Norway spike when they open up. We'll also have death numbers due to lockdown and not directly caused from contracting the virus (avoiding medical care for non-covid health issues).

And even if Sweden does have more deaths, they can quite easily compare deaths to quality of life and economics and personal well-being, as just that's already done for everything else in life that requires a balance between those things: speed limits, traffic signs and indicators, gun control, extreme sports, living in areas of frequent natural disasters, dangerous jobs, etc.
Compare quality of life for only a short-term period? Finland and Norway are not going to stay quarantined permanently. Finland for example has announced they are reopening schools starting May 13, and restaurants and theatres and so forth starting June 1, seems will basically be reopened back to same state as Sweden is within another month.

Say Finland doesn't have any significant 'second wave' of COVID. They shutdown completely though for 3 months unlike Sweden, and had about 20% of the total deaths per capita that Sweden did during that period. So the average Swedish person having restaurants and bars and schools open during March, April, & May of 2020 would still have been worth the 5X more deaths? How do you price the tradeoff in something like this? It seems really difficult to do.
please comment as well on population density in each country, given your affinity for statistics i'd welcome your views on that as well.

you seem to fully attribute differences in fatality rates to public policy, ignoring very different population densities in each of the three countries.




To be clear, I am not sure where my opinion lies on what Sweden did.

My primary question is how are folks actually going to ultimately grade whether what they did was 'right' compared to what Finland and Norway did.

People on both sides of the argument seem to be making a lot of assumptions, that Sweden will have a huge outbreak overwhelming healthcare system ( has not happened yet), or that Finland and Norway will have a much higher chance of a 'second wave' (who knows if that will happen). The economies of all three countries are getting hammered but presumably Sweden's less damaged In the short term than if they had done a full shutdown like their neighbors, but whether there is any notable economic benefit Sweden has a year from now compared to Finland/Norway because they never did a fully restrictive quarantine during the period March to May 2020, who knows.
DadHammer
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twk said:

A little more on Sweden's economic situation:

Quote:

Official figures show the country's economy shrank by just 0.3pc in the first three months of 2020, a far smaller decline than most forecasters and its central bank expected. The Riksbank had pencilled in a drop of between 0.8pc and 1.8pc.

The smaller scale of the fall contrasts with record slumps seen elsewhere across the Eurozone over the quarter as governments imposed much more stringent measures. France's economy tumbled 5.8pc, Italy's 4.7pc and Spain's by 5.2pc, while the Eurozone's output overall sank by 3.8pc - the worst decline in its history. The figures are likely to be far worse in the second quarter as lockdowns grind on.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2020/05/05/light-touch-sweden-suffers-smaller-growth-hit-coronavirus/

No doubt, the Swedish economy will suffer from the huge drop in worldwide demand, but they clearly have fared better than everyone else. If the US had taken a similar approach, it would have been beneficial for not only the US, but the entire world economy.

Their biggest failure on the health front, as mentioned, has been in nursing homes, which are proving troublesome everywhere (ask New York about that). While their numbers don't look as good as their closest neighbors, they are in line with much of Europe. It is fair to point out that the Swedes didn't just stand around and do nothing, but the point is that the government took some calculated risks (such as keeping elementary schools and restaurants open) that appear not to have resulted in a health catastrophe by any objective measure. You can argue that they fared worse than their closest neighbors, but they managed to avoid overwhelming their health care system while minimizing the damage to the economy.
Good post.

Add this to it and clearly the Swedish economy is not suffering even close to its neighbors. Not even close.

According to this source, Sweden's numbers are clearly superior:
Quote:

Quote:
Personal spending in Denmark is down 66 percent and in Finland it stands at 70 percent, compared to only 30 percent in Sweden. Unemployment claims in Norway are rising four times as fast as those in Sweden.

It is also expected to rebound much faster as well. Also Norway and Finland are not counting the elderly deaths the same as Sweden lowering their death numbers dramatically. This has been stated in many articles already posted on this thread.
Keegan99
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California Ag 90 said:

NASAg03 said:

Pumpkinhead said:

Sweden certainly seems to have a lot more deaths than immediate neighbors Finland and Norway.

So how in the end is somebody going to grade whether Sweden economically fared worse or better than Finland or Norway, making the 5X+ extra deaths that they incurred 'worth it'? Come back a year from now and look at unemployment rates, GDP retraction in 2020 compared to 2019, increased national debt?
In the end, we'll have numbers included from second waves, and watching Finland and Norway spike when they open up. We'll also have death numbers due to lockdown and not directly caused from contracting the virus (avoiding medical care for non-covid health issues).

And even if Sweden does have more deaths, they can quite easily compare deaths to quality of life and economics and personal well-being, as just that's already done for everything else in life that requires a balance between those things: speed limits, traffic signs and indicators, gun control, extreme sports, living in areas of frequent natural disasters, dangerous jobs, etc.
and we can again point out the population density in the principal urban area of each of the three countries, as done several pages back in this now-looping thread.

Stockholm: 13K per sq mile
Helsinki: 3.6K per sq mile
Oslo: 3.9K per sq mile




This is hugely important.

Stockholm is comparable in density to Boston or Chicago.

Helsinki and Oslo are more like Houston and Dallas.


So it's no surprise that Helsinki and Oslo have numbers resembling Houston and Dallas, while Stockholm has numbers resembling Boston and Chicago.
PJYoung
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PJYoung said:

DadHammer said:

Also Norway and Finland are not counting the elderly deaths the same as Sweden lowering their death numbers dramatically.

Not doubting you but can you cite a source on that?
DadHammer
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PJ it's in several of the articles published in this thread but I don't feel like looking it up again. I read it in at least three independent articles. When I run across it again I will post it for you.
DadHammer
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"Tegnell said that the number of admissions to Sweden's hospitals is "clearly falling," as well as the number of deaths. As of Thursday, Sweden has 23,918 confirmed cases of the virus and has recorded 2,941 deaths, with over half the deaths occurring in elderly care homes. Sweden conducts around 30,000 coronavirus tests per week."

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/05/07/sweden-coronavirus-chief-scientist-admits-lessons-have-been-learned.html

UTExan
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Quote:

Not a model for others

Despite many around the world looking upon Sweden's approach as a route out of restrictive lockdowns, Goldman analysts warn it cannot be copied like-for-like. That's because of the relatively unique demographics in Sweden.

"Its population density is about half that of Italy, and Sweden has a high proportion of single-occupancy households, and a relatively low proportion of multi-generational households. The Swedish experience therefore cannot be extrapolated to support a swift reopening elsewhere," said Goldman.

Even Swedish authorities themselves caution against returning everyday life to normal too soon. The Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency (MSB) warned of an increase in cases if citizens do not keep following government guidance. "There is a significant risk that people start to relax prematurely and stop following guidelines. Continue to follow the authorities' advice and be part of the solution," said Svante Werger, special adviser at MSB, to Aftonbladet.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidnikel/2020/05/06/swedens-coronavirus-approach-not-a-model-to-copy-warns-goldman-sachs/#1260419c2aac
It is better to light a flamethrower than to curse the darkness- Sir Terence Pratchett
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twk
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PJYoung said:

PJYoung said:

DadHammer said:

Also Norway and Finland are not counting the elderly deaths the same as Sweden lowering their death numbers dramatically.

Not doubting you but can you cite a source on that?

Not exactly on point, since I don't see any references to Denmark, Norway or Finland, but does address some of the issues:

The challenge of counting COVID-19 deaths

Sweden is shown as attributing 90% of excess deaths above normal to coronavirus, which is rather high compared to other countries.
PJYoung
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DadHammer said:

PJ it's in several of the articles published in this thread but I don't feel like looking it up again. I read it in at least three independent articles. When I run across it again I will post it for you.
Mordred
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twk said:

PJYoung said:

PJYoung said:

DadHammer said:

Also Norway and Finland are not counting the elderly deaths the same as Sweden lowering their death numbers dramatically.

Not doubting you but can you cite a source on that?

Not exactly on point, since I don't see any references to Denmark, Norway or Finland, but does address some of the issues:

The challenge of counting COVID-19 deaths

Sweden is shown as attributing 90% of excess deaths above normal to coronavirus, which is rather high compared to other countries.
Just to clarify because I'm not exactly sure what you're saying. What that article says is that Sweden is only counting "All deaths in and outside of hospitals of patients who have tested positive for COVID-19." And then Politico is saying that accounts for 90% of the excess deaths reported.

What it does means is that Sweden's testing and counting is probably pretty accurate, and not that they are artificially inflating counts.
Keegan99
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UTExan said:

Quote:

Not a model for others

Despite many around the world looking upon Sweden's approach as a route out of restrictive lockdowns, Goldman analysts warn it cannot be copied like-for-like. That's because of the relatively unique demographics in Sweden.

"Its population density is about half that of Italy, and Sweden has a high proportion of single-occupancy households, and a relatively low proportion of multi-generational households. The Swedish experience therefore cannot be extrapolated to support a swift reopening elsewhere," said Goldman.

Even Swedish authorities themselves caution against returning everyday life to normal too soon. The Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency (MSB) warned of an increase in cases if citizens do not keep following government guidance. "There is a significant risk that people start to relax prematurely and stop following guidelines. Continue to follow the authorities' advice and be part of the solution," said Svante Werger, special adviser at MSB, to Aftonbladet.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidnikel/2020/05/06/swedens-coronavirus-approach-not-a-model-to-copy-warns-goldman-sachs/#1260419c2aac


Low density? High proportion of single occupancy households? Low proportion of multi-generational households?

That sounds like pretty much the entire US outside of NYC.
twk
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Mordred said:

twk said:

PJYoung said:

PJYoung said:

DadHammer said:

Also Norway and Finland are not counting the elderly deaths the same as Sweden lowering their death numbers dramatically.

Not doubting you but can you cite a source on that?

Not exactly on point, since I don't see any references to Denmark, Norway or Finland, but does address some of the issues:

The challenge of counting COVID-19 deaths

Sweden is shown as attributing 90% of excess deaths above normal to coronavirus, which is rather high compared to other countries.
Just to clarify because I'm not exactly sure what you're saying. What that article says is that Sweden is only counting "All deaths in and outside of hospitals of patients who have tested positive for COVID-19." And then Politico is saying that accounts for 90% of the excess deaths reported.

What it does means is that Sweden's testing and counting is probably pretty accurate, and not that they are artificially inflating counts.
The numbers are all over the place. If I read that part correctly, I take it as evidence that Sweden is definitely not undercounting, compared to the other countries discussed (only Belgium had a higher percentage of excess deaths counted as coronavirus deaths). Now, as to PJ's question, he asked about Sweden's immediate neighbors, and unfortunately, those countries are not discussed in the linked article.
California Ag 90
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Pumpkinhead said:

California Ag 90 said:

please comment as well on population density in each country, given your affinity for statistics i'd welcome your views on that as well.

you seem to fully attribute differences in fatality rates to public policy, ignoring very different population densities in each of the three countries.




To be clear, I am not sure where my opinion lies on what Sweden did.

My primary question is how are folks actually going to ultimately grade whether what they did was 'right' compared to what Finland and Norway did.

People on both sides of the argument seem to be making a lot of assumptions, that Sweden will have a huge outbreak overwhelming healthcare system ( has not happened yet), or that Finland and Norway will have a much higher chance of a 'second wave' (who knows if that will happen). The economies of all three countries are getting hammered but presumably Sweden's less damaged In the short term than if they had done a full shutdown like their neighbors, but whether there is any notable economic benefit Sweden has a year from now compared to Finland/Norway because they never did a fully restrictive quarantine during the period March to May 2020, who knows.
great reply - i was being a little snarky and you handled it with grace - pretty rare these days.

am weary of the single-variable armchair analysts who have owned this issue since it started. all of these issues are nested and complex with a lot of offsetting tradeoffs, with ramifications to public health and overall death rates on every angle.

historians will be grappling with your question for a long time (decades) to come in the aftermath of this disaster.

We're from North California, and South Alabam
and little towns all around this land...
California Ag 90
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UTExan said:

Quote:

Not a model for others

Despite many around the world looking upon Sweden's approach as a route out of restrictive lockdowns, Goldman analysts warn it cannot be copied like-for-like. That's because of the relatively unique demographics in Sweden.

"Its population density is about half that of Italy, and Sweden has a high proportion of single-occupancy households, and a relatively low proportion of multi-generational households. The Swedish experience therefore cannot be extrapolated to support a swift reopening elsewhere," said Goldman.

Even Swedish authorities themselves caution against returning everyday life to normal too soon. The Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency (MSB) warned of an increase in cases if citizens do not keep following government guidance. "There is a significant risk that people start to relax prematurely and stop following guidelines. Continue to follow the authorities' advice and be part of the solution," said Svante Werger, special adviser at MSB, to Aftonbladet.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidnikel/2020/05/06/swedens-coronavirus-approach-not-a-model-to-copy-warns-goldman-sachs/#1260419c2aac
well, this buttresses any explanation why Italy suffered so much more than Sweden.

it says nothing about Sweden vis-a-vis the neighbors it is so often negatively compared to (Finland and Norway), that have similar demographics in terms of single-occupancy households, along with much less dense urban centers.

We're from North California, and South Alabam
and little towns all around this land...
 
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