tresir2012
Former Member
- Joined
- May 7, 2019
- Messages
- 11,156
- Reaction score
- 56,469
My problem with these kinds of main stream articles is, firstly, that the pandemic is not over. Not in Sweden, not anywhere.
So how can anyone claim something worked or didn't work, or compare statistics between countries, when everything is going to change, there will most likely be another surge this fall and more after that. That's like calling the outcome of a baseball game after the first inning.
Secondly, if you actually read the article, no one in Sweden is talking about having achieved herd immunity. That idea is inserted by whoever is writing these silly articles.
"Achieving herd immunity was one of Tegnell’s original aims – but antibody surveys suggest only about 20 per cent of people in Stockholm have been infected, similar to levels in London and New York. That is far short of near the 70 per cent level estimated to be needed".
Is Sweden's coronavirus strategy a cautionary tale or a success story?
(Even this article makes the same mistake of talking about the pandemic as though it's over).
The Swedish experts are explaining that the strategy was to encourage Swedes to take personal responsibility, rather than imposing rules that invite some to become defiant. This is precisely because the Swedish epidemiologist recognized this was going to be a long term pandemic, not a 2 month inconvenience.
“Voluntary restrictions work as well as legal ones,” says the architect of Sweden’s strategy, chief epidemiologist Anders Tegnell.
"This appears to be true, in Sweden at least. The measures did work nearly as well in getting people to change their behaviour."
Sweden is a very unique country, with a highly educated, responsible, cohesive, respectful society. Swedes don't gather by by the thousands in motorcycle rallies etc, they don't get into fisticuffs over someone wearing a mask or not.
EMC Rallies
They do normally have motorbike rallies but this year was cancelled. Probably due to the 50 limit on gatherings.