Architect of Sweden's coronavirus strategy admits too many died
Sweden’s chief epidemiologist and the architect of its
light-touch approach to the coronavirus has acknowledged that the country has
had too many deaths from Covid-19 and should have done more to curb the spread
of the virus.
Anders Tegnell, who has previously criticised other
countries’ strict lockdowns as not sustainable in the long run, told Swedish
Radio on Wednesday that there was “quite obviously a potential for improvement
in what we have done” in Sweden.
Asked whether too many people in Sweden had died, he
replied: “Yes, absolutely,” adding that the country would have to consider in
the future whether there had been a way of preventing such a high toll.
The country’s death rate per capita was the highest in
the world over the seven days to 2 June, figures suggest. This week the Swedish
government, bowing to opposition pressure, promised to set up a commission to
look into its Covid-19 strategy.
“If we were to encounter the same disease again knowing
exactly what we know about it today, I think we would settle on doing something
in between what Sweden did and what the rest of the world has done,” Tegnell
said. It would be “good to know exactly what to shut down to curb the spread of
infection better”, he added.
According to the scientific online publication
Ourworldindata.com, the number of Covid-19 deaths per capita in Sweden was the
highest in the world in a rolling seven-day average to 2 June. The country’s
rate of 5.29 deaths per million inhabitants a day was well above the UK’s 4.48.
Relying on its citizens’ sense of civic duty, Sweden
closed schools for all over-16s and banned gatherings of more than 50, but only
asked – rather than ordered – people to avoid non-essential travel and not to
go out if they were elderly or ill. Shops, restaurants and gyms have remained
open.
Although there are signs that public opinion is starting
to shift, polls have shown a large majority of Swedes support and have
generally complied with the government’s less coercive strategy, which is in
stark contrast to the mandatory lockdowns imposed by many countries, including
Sweden’s Nordic neighbours.
But the policy, which Tegnell has said was aimed not at
achieving herd immunity but at slowing the spread of the virus enough for
health services to cope, has been increasingly and heavily criticised by many
Swedish experts.
Sweden’s 4,468 fatalities from Covid-19 represent a death
toll of 449 per million inhabitants, compared with 45 in Norway, 100 in Denmark
and 58 in Finland. Its per-million tally remains lower than the corresponding
figures of 555, 581 and 593 in Italy, Spain and the UK respectively.
Norway and Denmark announced last week that they were
dropping mutual border controls but would provisionally exclude Sweden from a
Nordic “travel bubble” because of its much higher coronavirus infection rate.
Tegnell told Swedish Radio it was not clear yet exactly
what the country should have done differently, or whether the restrictions it
did impose should have been introduced simultaneously rather than step by step.
“Other countries started with a lot of measures all at
once. The problem with that is that you don’t really know which of the measures
you have taken is most effective,” he said, adding that conclusions would have
to be drawn about “what else, besides what we did, you could do without
imposing a total shutdown.”
Despite the stated goal of protecting the nation’s
elderly people, Sweden’s strategy has been particularly catastrophic for this
age group, with roughly half the country’s deaths so far occurring in care
homes.
Annike Linde, Tegnell’s predecessor as chief
epidemiologist from 2005 to 2013, said last week that she had initially backed
the country’s strategy, but had begun to reassess her view as the virus swept
through the elderly population.
“There was no strategy at all for the elderly, I now
understand,” Linde told the Swedish state broadcaster. “I do not understand how
they can stand and say the level of preparedness was good, when in fact it was
lousy.”
She said another key mistake was to assume that the
coronavirus would behave like seasonal flu. “It does not behave like the flu at
all,” she said. “It spreads more slowly and has a longer incubation time. This
makes it more difficult to detect, and to build immunity in the population.”
Sweden would have done better to follow its Nordic
neighbours, close its borders and invest in testing and tracking to a far greater
extent, she said.
A study last month found that only 7.3% of Stockholm’s
inhabitants had developed Covid-19 antibodies by the end of April.




