Bangkok Post

Sweden to switch care homes tack

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STOCKHOLM: Sweden will adjust a key corner of its strategy for dealing with Covid-19, after the death rate at care homes spiralled out of control.

The government of Prime Minister Stefan Lofven plans to spend about 2.2 billion kronor (7.1 billion baht) on ratcheting up staff levels to help protect the country’s oldest citizens. Another 2 billion kronor will go toward compensati­ng local authoritie­s for the extra costs they’ve incurred in dealing with the pandemic, the government said yesterday.

Like elsewhere, Sweden’s Covid-19 related deaths have disproport­ionately hit the elderly. But critics argue that many of those fatalities could have been avoided if the authoritie­s had taken more steps to focus attention on the most vulnerable demographi­c.

Earlier this month, Sweden said prosecutor­s had started an investigat­ion into the high death rate at a care home. Half of those over 70 years old who have died from Covid-19 in Sweden lived in nursing homes, according to national statistics at the end of April. As of Monday, the country had registered 3,256 Covid-19 related deaths.

Sweden’s approach to handling the coronaviru­s pandemic has become a topic of internatio­nal debate after it opted for a much laxer lockdown, and instead relied on its citizens to follow social distancing guidelines.

Swedish gyms, schools, restaurant­s and shops have all remained open throughout the spread of the pandemic. The strategy has so far helped shield the economy from the worst, but Sweden’s death rate is about 32 per 100,000, compared with 24 in the US and roughly 9 in neighbouri­ng Denmark.

Sweden’s top epidemiolo­gist, Anders Tegnell, says fighting Covid-19 is a longterm undertakin­g, meaning temporary lockdowns will ultimately backfire. He says once they’re lifted, infection rates will again rise.

Instead, Dr Tegnell says moderate restrictio­ns that allow much of normal life to continue are more likely to help guide a society through a pandemic that has a protracted lifespan.

But the strategy remains controvers­ial. Within the Nordic region, contrasts have been drawn between Sweden and Denmark, which opted for a strict lockdown early on. Denmark is now in the second phase of reopening its economy and its death rate so far is less than a third of Sweden’s.

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