The Post

Swedes told to brace for deaths

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Stefan Lofven, Sweden’s prime minister has told the country to steel itself for thousands of deaths after 2300 doctors and academics criticised its laissez-faire approach to the pandemic.

The Swedish ‘‘mitigation’’ strategy, under which life has been allowed to go on with a degree of normality for most of the population while the vulnerable have been urged to stay at home, is being closely watched by scientists and political leaders across Europe.

Bars, schools, restaurant­s, offices and galleries remain open and, until recently, people were allowed to gather in groups of up to 500. With the exception of Belarus, whose dictator claims farm labour and vodka can cure the virus, no large European country has allowed its citizens to retain so many old habits.

The Swedish public health authority argues that Swedes can be trusted to practise social distancing voluntaril­y and use common sense. It also believes that the restrictio­ns must be light enough to be sustained for months if necessary. Yet as the death toll mounted to 401 – in per capita terms, a fatality rate higher than the US’s and slightly behind Iran’s – dissent has grown.

Last week 2300 doctors and academics, including Carl-Henrik Heldin, the head of the Nobel foundation, published an open letter urging the government to change course. Some called for Stockholm, the capital, to be locked down after more than 50 elderly people in its care homes died from Covid-19.

Yesterday, Lofven, a Social

Democrat, adopted a grim tone, saying that although the spread of the epidemic had been slower in Sweden, that did not mean fewer people would die. ‘‘We will have more seriously ill people who need intensive care,’’ he told the Dagens Nyheter newspaper. ‘‘We are facing thousands of deaths. We need to prepare for that.’’

He seemed to play down the disparity between Sweden’s strategy and those of other states. He said they shared the goal of easing the strain on their hospitals through social distancing. ‘‘I don’t think you ought to dramatise [the difference­s],’’ he said. ‘‘We’re doing it in a different way. Sometimes that is because we are in difference phases [of the pandemic].’’

There are signs that Sweden is tightening restrictio­ns. The maximum size of mass events has been cut from 499 to 49 and bars and restaurant­s were told to offer only table service. A number of cultural institutio­ns, including the Abba museum, the main national gallery, have closed of their own volition.

Olle Kampe, professor of endocrinol­ogy at the Karolinska Institute, the country’s foremost medical research centre, accused the government of permitting the virus to spread in the ‘‘cynical’’ hope of achieving herd immunity.

However, Anders Tegnell, the Swedish chief epidemiolo­gist running the Covid-19 strategy, was unmoved. ‘‘We think we’ve already taken the most important measures,’’ he said last week. ‘‘Stay home if you feel ill; work from home if you can; and ensure that we protect our older fellow citizens. You could alter other rules, such as those governing trips to the restaurant or gatherings, but you get the best effect when everyone simply sticks to the basic code of conduct.’’

 ?? AP ?? Young people socialise together in Stockholm, Sweden, a nation living without a lockdown.
AP Young people socialise together in Stockholm, Sweden, a nation living without a lockdown.

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