mango
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
New Statesman: Sweden’s Anders Tegnell: We did not pursue “herd immunity” against Covid-19
https://www.newstatesman.com/world/...did-not-pursue-herd-immunity-against-covid-19
What's it like in other countries, do people really stop social distancing as soon as they put on a mask..? If not, why would they think Swedes would behave any differently? Is this really their best justification for going against the WHO's recommendations?
How about at least recommending masks in situations where social distancing isn't possible, please? I really do believe it would help.
https://www.newstatesman.com/world/...did-not-pursue-herd-immunity-against-covid-19
Sweden’s approach has not been cost-free: as of 18 October it had recorded the 15th-highest per capita death rate of any country (with 581 deaths per million people). This is still lower than the UK’s rate (655 deaths) but around ten times higher than neighbouring Finland and Norway.
In Sweden, as in the UK, around half of all Covid-19 deaths occurred in care homes. Care workers initially avoided wearing masks and gloves (some for fear of giving offence to residents) and were discouraged from admitting patients to hospital. “We did not manage to protect the most vulnerable people, the most elderly, despite our best intentions,” Prime Minister Löfven conceded.
Again, as in the UK, ethnic minorities were disproportionately affected by Covid. Of the first ten deaths in Stockholm, six occurred among the Somali community (which accounts for 0.84 per cent of the city’s population). Swedish authorities acknowledged delays in translating health information into other languages.
After so far avoiding a second wave on the scale of those seen in France, Spain and the UK, Tegnell is more bullish than in June but remains cautious (Sweden recorded 970 new Covid-19 cases on 14 October, the highest number for nearly four months).
“For once we need to be humble, it is still early days... We feel we have [the virus] under control but things might still be happening, this disease continues to surprise us.
They also say that Sweden's "impressive levels of social trust meant citizens were expected to behave responsibly without state coercion." The government dumps most of the responsibility (for controlling the spread of the virus) on us as individuals, but they don't believe we are able to wear a mask and keep social distance at the same time..? If that's how much confidence they really have in us (and maybe they're right), why would they not choose tighter restrictions that don't rely so heavily on people "using their common sense" (as they call it) and "behaving responsibly" voluntarily?Tegnell defended his decision not to prescribe mask-wearing. “We are worried that it would diminish social distancing, which is definitely the most important part.
What's it like in other countries, do people really stop social distancing as soon as they put on a mask..? If not, why would they think Swedes would behave any differently? Is this really their best justification for going against the WHO's recommendations?
How about at least recommending masks in situations where social distancing isn't possible, please? I really do believe it would help.
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