Booray said:
Johnny Bear said:
Sweden took more proportionate actions such as utilizing social distancing, but they didn't "lockdown" and nuke their economy. So far I'm not hearing anything about people dropping dead in the streets from Covid in Sweden as if the Bubonic Plague has set in.
Somehow I think they've been the smart ones in this particular case.
Sweden's Covid numbers are multiples of the other Scandinavian countries. That only proves that restrictions save lives, not that the cost of savings those lives was worth it. But I wouldn't jump to the conclusion that the "Swedes got it right."
Per capita cases in Sweden are not far from Norway's or Denmark's. Sweden even has more density than Norway, but far less than Denmark. The Swedish epidemiologist consultant said in his now famous interview that the thing Sweden was too slow with was locking down their nursing homes. Their nursing homes are rather large compared to their neighbors as well. That could (not sure) explain the difference in the deaths per million.
Norway's population density: 15/km2
Finland's population density 19/km2
Sweden population density 22.2/km2
Denmark's population density 6800/km2
Norway population est. 5,415.000
Finland population est. 5,500,000
Sweden population est. 10,100,000
Denmark population est, 5,790,000
Finland is the outlier having done very well.
Norway
serious cases: 58
cases per million: 1326
deaths per million: 34
Finland
serious cases: 63
cases per million: 724
deaths per million: 25
Sweden
serious cases: 515
cases per million: 1517
deaths per million: 175
Denmark
serious cases: 81
cases per million: 1329
deaths per million: 64