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sweden king admits failure in handling covid...

kaninabuchaojibye

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bbc.com
Coronavirus: Swedish King Carl XVI Gustaf says coronavirus approach 'has failed'

King Carl Gustaf of Sweden attend the funeral of Grand Duke Jean of Luxembourg on May 4, 2019 in Luxembourg,
image copyrightGetty Images
image captionSweden's King Carl XVI Gustaf says 2020 was a terrible year

Sweden's king has said his country "failed" to save lives with its relatively relaxed approach to the coronavirus pandemic.

King Carl XVI Gustaf made the remarks as part of an annual TV review of the year with the royal family.

Sweden, which has never imposed a full lockdown, has seen nearly 350,000 cases and more than 7,800 deaths - a lot more than its Scandinavian neighbours.

Prime Minister Stefan Lofven said he agreed with the king's remarks.

"Of course the fact that so many have died can't be considered as anything other than a failure," Mr Lofven told reporters.

Referring to the government's strategy, Mr Lofven added that "it's when we are through the pandemic that the real conclusions can be drawn".

In the programme, the king says: "I think we have failed. We have a large number who have died and that is terrible.

"The people of Sweden have suffered tremendously in difficult conditions. One thinks of all the family members who have happened to be unable to say goodbye to their deceased family members. I think it is a tough and traumatic experience not to be able to say a warm goodbye."

When asked if he was afraid of being infected with Covid-19, the king - who is 74 - said: "Lately, it has felt more obvious, it has crept closer and closer. That's not what you want."

Instead of relying on legal sanctions, Sweden appeals to citizens' sense of responsibility and civic duty, and issues only recommendations. There are no sanctions if they are ignored.

Sweden has never imposed a nationwide lockdown or the wearing of masks, and bars and restaurants have remained open.

However, earlier this week, schools across the Stockholm region were asked to switch to distance learning for 13 to 15-year-olds for the first time as soon as possible. The measure was announced in response to rising Covid-19 cases.

This came a week after a nationwide decision on 7 December to switch to remote learning for those over 16.

And on Monday, new nationwide social-distancing recommendations for the Christmas period came into force, replacing similar region-specific guidelines.

Swedes are advised to meet a maximum of eight people, gather outdoors if possible and avoid travelling by train or bus.

A formal ban on public gatherings of more than eight people remains, affecting events such as concerts, sports matches and demonstrations.

Sweden's state epidemiologist, Anders Tegnell, in November explained the strategy relied on a combination of legal and voluntary measures.

He told the BBC that this was, in the Swedish context, "the combination that we really believe is the best one".

media captionTegnell: "Not yet possible to say which country has right strategy" (November 2020 interview)

According to an official report released earlier this week, the strategy failed in its effort to protect the elderly in care homes - for which the government has admitted responsibility.

Over 90% of Covid-related deaths have been among those aged 70 and over, and nearly half of all Covid deaths have been in care homes, the government says.
Mr Tegnell said his agency (Sweden's Public Health Agency) was not responsible for directing the elderly care system, and added all stakeholders needed to help to improve the situation to make sure the elderly did not get infected.

He said he thought Sweden had become better at protecting older people, and that no country had succeeded entirely in that area - even Germany was being hit hard right now, he told Swedish radio on Wednesday.

Sweden has had more deaths than the rest of the Nordic countries combined. This has led to criticism from the country's neighbours, Norway, Denmark and Finland, that its less strict approach is putting their own measures at risk.

On Tuesday, Prime Minister Lofven also said he felt many experts had underestimated the second wave.

"I think most in the profession did not see such a wave incoming. There was instead talk of different clusters," he said in an interview with daily Aftonbladet.
 

tanwahtiu

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Hello Sam.... Are u wearing mask now...

NZ top the list with the most mental health problem people in the world. Many xiao lang kia in NZ...
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
Here is the data.
Hello Sam.... Are u wearing mask now...

NZ top the list with the most mental health problem people in the world. Many xiao lang kia in NZ...

NZ does not believe that masks make much difference so there is no requirement to wear masks. I have not worn a mask since the beginning of this charade.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
Sweden Z score shows that there are no excess deaths for this time of the year. It is doing better than other countries in the region.

Screen Shot 2020-12-18 at 3.09.25 PM.png
 

Leongsam

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Admin
Asset
gript.ie

Swedish King says no-lockdown policy failed - but did it really? | Gript


4 minutes




If you’ve looked at the world news at all lately, you probably will have seen that Sweden’s king claimed that his country “failed” to save lives with its no-lockdown approach to the covid-19 pandemic, describing 2020 as “a terrible year”.

The scandinavian country has been blasted by many in the international community this year for their relatively lax approach to combating the virus.

No doubt many will take this as the ultimate proof that the successive lockdowns seen in the rest of Europe were not only effective, but absolutely necessary to avoid mass casualties. “You see?! We made the right call all along.”

However, before pro-lockdown ideologues start breaking out the champagne, not so fast. Despite what the king might say, there is more to this story.
On paper it certainly seems true that Sweden’s covid-19 death rate is way up from its Scandinavian neighbours like Norway and Denmark, and pro-lockdown commentators are often quick to remind us of it.

But while covid deaths may be up, one very important number is not: the overall death rate. In fact, if anything, that number is slightly down from previous years in the last decade with less than two weeks left to go in the year.

snip.jpg

These figures (which can be independently verified through Eurostat, the EU’s official statistics body, and Statistics Sweden, the Swedish government agency that records national statistics) indicate that the total number of people who died in Sweden in 2020 was no more than any other normal year, and possibly even slightly less.

This paints a radically different picture than what is being purported by most of the media. Listening to them, you’d swear the corpses were piled a mile high in the streets of Stockholm. Yet if all you were given was the numbers of people dying overall in Swedish society, you’d have no way of knowing that there was a “deadly pandemic” at all based on these figures.

Some, of course, will point out that far more Swedes apparently died from coronavirus than did Norweigans or Danes – at least, that’s how the numbers are being reported. But even if that’s the case, is that really the point?

The world was told that economy-destroying lockdowns were urgently required to save lives, and that without them, we’d have countless deaths on our hands. And yet Sweden, which did not lock down until just last month, apparently has no more deaths in 2020 than it did last year or the year before.

Except the Swedes have the added bonus of seeing one of the smallest economic contractions of any European country, and will probably fare far better than the rest of us in terms of job losses and damage to native industry. According to Reuters the other day, the Swedish government is projecting a 2.9% shrink in GDP compared to a 7.3% drop expected across the Eurozone according to the European Central Bank – all without any apparent excess deaths than any normal year. I wouldn’t exactly call that a “failure”, regardless of what the Swedish king thinks.

Why exactly is the death rate so low? Well, I haven’t the foggiest. Your guess is as good as mine. But whatever the cause is, this is the reality, whether lockdown fetishists would like to admit it or not.
 

syed putra

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Tiger woods pro carrier went bust trying to escape a rampaging blonde wife and hurt his back in the process when the car crashed.
 
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