PJYoung said:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/15/sweden-coronavirus-death-toll-reaches-1000
That article gives a great outline of what is happening in Sweden. It seems to all be going according to plan so far, not without complaints.
Quote:
While authorities have closed senior high schools and banned gatherings of more than 50 people, they have asked rather than ordered people to avoid non-essential travel, work from home and stay indoors if they are over 70 or are feeling ill.
Statistics show roughly half the Swedish workforce is now working from home, public transport usage has fallen by 50% in Stockholm and the capital's streets are about 70% less busy than usual but Swedes are still able to shop, go to restaurants, get haircuts and send children under 16 to class even if a family member is ill.
The government's refusal to close primary and junior high schools and authorities' insistence that only children who are themselves ill may stay at home has caused some families and teachers particular concern, staff and parent groups have said.
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Some experts have speculated that Sweden's approach to managing the spread of the virus may also be influenced by its demographic profile more than 50% of households are single-person and relatively low population density of about 25 people per square kilometre, compared with, for example, 205 in Italy and 259 in the UK.
Although the longer-term impact is obviously unknown, Sweden's strategy is not expected to preserve the country's economy this year any more than those of countries imposing stricter lockdowns: Magdalena Andersson, the finance minister, said on Wednesday GDP could shrink by 10% this year and unemployment rise to 13.5%.
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The chief epidemiologist has repeatedly stressed that the world is in uncharted territory with the coronavirus, arguing that while Sweden might have more infections in the short term, it will not face the risk of a huge infection increase that many other countries might face once their strict lockdowns are lifted.
The biggest thing Sweden has likely accomplished in its approach is with keeping kids in school. Think about what that probably means for a minute.
Unless their kids are exponentially more fastidious than US kids (and I can't speak for the Scandinavians, but German kids are wilder and nastier than most US kids, while the adults are probably closer to Swedes), they have probably made great progress toward establishing a robust herd immunity among schoolchildren. That's a huge part of the battle in herd immunity, because kids can be such a vector for infection.
Compare that to the US approach, where we have I think about 15% of the population as school age. More if you add college kids. If we had largely kept kids in school but isolated at risk teachers and kids living with at risk parents, we may have been able to achieve a huge chunk of herd immunity without anything close to a commensurate increase in mortality.
We were so concerned about overwhelming a hospital system that won'r come close to being overwhelmed in the vast majority of the country, we may have missed an opportunity to eliminate (not the Chinese usage!) a critical percentage of the population from being carriers. Think about the economic implications of that as well.
Shutting down college classes made even less sense than shutting down k-12, because they live almost exclusively with other college kids. With the restaurants and bars all shut down, they weren't likely to get anyone older infected. Faculty and staff would need PPE and distancing, but that's doable.
In fact, the best thing we could probably do is send all the kids in the country to a three-week summer camp right now with college age camp counselors and let the infection run amok.
Before you dismiss the thought of what might have been regarding our approach to schools, check out this article and embedded video from a NY epidemiologist who says we're doing this all wrong:
https://www.aier.org/article/stand-up-for-your-rights-says-professor-knut-m-wittkowski/