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-   -   Sweden Dealing with Covid the Right Way (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/1057201-sweden-dealing-covid-right-way.html)

ckissick 04-09-2020 08:32 AM

My hope for Sweden is that they'll have a curve that is only moderately flattened, but will have only one hump when all of this is over. Other countries may have flatter curves, but when they relax measures, it may ramp up and start all over again because so many people had not been exposed. The numbers may not look so good in Sweden at the moment, but in the long run it may turn out okay, and their economy will be in much better shape. Let's hope so, anyway.

ckissick 04-09-2020 12:29 PM

The latest out of Sweden. The comments are interesting.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/swedens-relaxed-approach-coronavirus-could-143358386.html

Cajundaddy 04-09-2020 01:26 PM

Many of the Docs there are not convinced this is the best course of action.

A head doctor at a major hospital in Sweden says the current approach will “probably end in a historical massacre.” He says healthcare workers at his hospital who have tested positive for the virus but are asymptomatic have been advised to continue working. He asked to remain anonymous because “it is frowned upon to speak of the epidemic or to go against the official vision” but said he felt a need to speak out from an “ethical and medical point of view.”

Jim Richards 04-09-2020 01:52 PM

https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3078840/coronavirus-low-antibody-levels-raise-questions-about

McLovin 04-09-2020 02:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cajundaddy (Post 10817905)
Many of the Docs there are not convinced this is the best course of action.

Yet, many of the Docs there are convinced it is.

So I guess it’s a wash.

1990C4S 04-09-2020 03:02 PM

Quote:

A head doctor at a major hospital in Sweden says the current approach will “probably end in a historical massacre.” He says healthcare workers at his hospital who have tested positive for the virus but are asymptomatic have been advised to continue working. He asked to remain anonymous because “it is frowned upon to speak of the epidemic or to go against the official vision” but said he felt a need to speak out from an “ethical and medical point of view.”
Yup, that's the solution. :rolleyes: (If it's true).

smokintr6 04-09-2020 04:01 PM

US was criticized for not accepting COVID test kits that were already available... but those tests did not meet our standards. I read the article you posted, and it said that 10% of the people had antibodies that were so low they could not be detected in a lab. That could easily be explained by ****ty Chinese tests returning a false positive. I dont actually think 10% false positive is excessive considering how ****ty the stuff from there can be. They could be run of the mill Flu survivors. orrr the chinese have accidentally created a super virus that can't be stopped with heard immunity. This is probably the most disheartening article I've read in the last month.

Jim Richards 04-09-2020 04:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by smokintr6 (Post 10818079)
This is probably the most disheartening article I've read in the last month.

^^^this

dad911 04-09-2020 04:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by smokintr6 (Post 10818079)
...... orrr the chinese have accidentally created a super virus that can't be stopped with heard immunity. This is probably the most disheartening article I've read in the last month.

If that's the case, sweden is fuched.

red-beard 04-09-2020 04:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by smokintr6 (Post 10818079)
US was criticized for not accepting COVID test kits that were already available... but those tests did not meet our standards. I read the article you posted, and it said that 10% of the people had antibodies that were so low they could not be detected in a lab. That could easily be explained by ****ty Chinese tests returning a false positive. I dont actually think 10% false positive is excessive considering how ****ty the stuff from there can be. They could be run of the mill Flu survivors. orrr the chinese have accidentally created a super virus that can't be stopped with heard immunity. This is probably the most disheartening article I've read in the last month.

This is not true. The test kits were never offered. These kits were destined for countries unable to make their own tests.

All this aside, the Chinese test kits are about like most stuff from China.

red-beard 04-09-2020 04:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KC911 (Post 10817336)
Try telling my 84 yr old dad not to go out to to his breakfast spot (for pickup) unnecessarily...good luck with that :(

Thankfully it finally closed...

I can't get my 86 year old mother to stop going to the store. She has THREE refrigerators full of food.

smokintr6 04-09-2020 04:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by red-beard (Post 10818134)
I can't get my 86 year old mother to stop going to the store. She has THREE refrigerators full of food.


More than likely you get to that age and you’d rather die than give up your last freedoms that make up your life.

rusnak 04-09-2020 06:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by red-beard (Post 10818134)
I can't get my 86 year old mother to stop going to the store. She has THREE refrigerators full of food.

It's the routine. You can't get them out of it. At a certain age, they need the routine or they feel disturbed/ unsettled. Something is comforting to them about doing the same thing every day. Mom and Dad go to estate sales and garage sales. They have so much used crap in their two houses, my sister has her own garage sale to sell their crap to make more room.

island911 04-09-2020 09:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dad911 (Post 10818126)
If that's the case, sweden is fuched.

Just Sweden?

If that's the case we are all fukt

RSBob 04-09-2020 09:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RSBob (Post 10815628)
Sweden is our Alabama or Mississippi, just wait a couple of weeks to see the result.

What this guy said.

As Island said, “ It’s so obvious”

93nav 04-09-2020 10:47 PM

And your Mom and Dad probably went to it (your sister's garage sale).


Quote:

Originally Posted by rusnak (Post 10818249)
It's the routine. You can't get them out of it. At a certain age, they need the routine or they feel disturbed/ unsettled. Something is comforting to them about doing the same thing every day. Mom and Dad go to estate sales and garage sales. They have so much used crap in their two houses, my sister has her own garage sale to sell their crap to make more room.


RNajarian 04-12-2020 07:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ckissick (Post 10817809)
The latest out of Sweden. The comments are interesting.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/swedens-relaxed-approach-coronavirus-could-143358386.html

You may be right . . .

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8212365/Swedish-PM-tighten-coronavirus-restrictions-Austria-Denmark-begin-easing-lockdown.html

dewolf 04-12-2020 08:17 PM

Sweden 10.2M people Current deaths 899

Australia 25.5M people Current deaths 59

Not sure it's working for Sweden.

island911 04-12-2020 08:39 PM

There's a 2 week lag?

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1586749151.jpg

McLovin 04-12-2020 09:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tcar (Post 10822233)
Sweden's plan is starting to fall apart....

Is it? Idk, these articles are often confusing and not particularly well written. They often seem to say contradictory things within the same article.

Anyways, from today’s article cited above. Is that good or bad for Sweden?

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1586750397.jpg

island911 04-12-2020 09:05 PM

Exactly.

How is the HUGE drop explained? You know, if they are doing it all wrong.

Shouldn't it be EXPONENTIAL from their failure to contain?

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1586749151.jpg

Cajundaddy 04-12-2020 09:06 PM

This thing is still super-fluid and drawing conclusions or calling the final score in the 1st quarter is pretty useless. Sweden is running a grand experiment and we will know the results next year, not next week or even next month.

McLovin 04-12-2020 09:13 PM

I agree, but these articles are so weird.

Here’s the headline:

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1586751164.jpg

Then buried at the very end:

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1586751202.jpg

island911 04-12-2020 11:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cajundaddy (Post 10822252)
This thing is still super-fluid and drawing conclusions or calling the final score in the 1st quarter is pretty useless. Sweden is running a grand experiment and we will know the results next year, not next week or even next month.

Agree.

And yet people quickly conclude that Sweden is doing it wrong... not enough social distancing is the problem.

A lot of countries have been locked down and still have much higher deaths per population than does Sweden. Spain, Italy, France, Belgium ... all have more than double the percentage of deaths from CV.

There are clearly so many factors here beyond only Social distancing..

livi 04-12-2020 11:53 PM

Somewhat simplified way of looking at it would be that no matter what strategy, its just a matter of time until every part of the world will have basically the same death toll per capitae. If we can´t erradicate this virus like smallpox and naturaly immunity/vaccine only have a limited time effect, sooner or later everybody succeptible will run into it.

This is of course not taken into account the deaths that partly will be caused by a overwhelmed healthcare, not enough ventilators etc. Other factors as well will also have an impact on some countries, geographic areas. Age distribution, smoking, general health etc.

But basically, without a long natural immunity or effective vaccin, the virus will sooner or later have flooded every corner of the world no matter degree of lockdown.

jyl 04-13-2020 04:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by McLovin (Post 10822256)
I agree, but these articles are so weird.

<snip>

Then buried at the very end:

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1586751202.jpg

Significant “weekend effect” in Sweden data (and many other countries’ data too).

https://91-divoc.com/pages/covid-visualization/

Sooner or later 04-13-2020 04:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by island911 (Post 10822250)
Exactly.

How is the HUGE drop explained? You know, if they are doing it all wrong.

Shouldn't it be EXPONENTIAL from their failure to contain?

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1586749151.jpg

If you look at past data that don't report many on weekends. I have been waiting to see today's number.

12 (Yesterday, Sunday)
17 (Saturday)
77
106
96
114
76
23 (Sunday)
15 (Saturday)
50
59

jyl 04-13-2020 04:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by livi (Post 10822307)
Somewhat simplified way of looking at it would be that no matter what strategy, its just a matter of time until every part of the world will have basically the same death toll per capitae. If we can´t erradicate this virus like smallpox and naturaly immunity/vaccine only have a limited time effect, sooner or later everybody succeptible will run into it.

This is of course not taken into account the deaths that partly will be caused by a overwhelmed healthcare, not enough ventilators etc. Other factors as well will also have an impact on some countries, geographic areas. Age distribution, smoking, general health etc.

But basically, without a long natural immunity or effective vaccin, the virus will sooner or later have flooded every corner of the world no matter degree of lockdown.

But that ignores two factors that can’t be ignored:

1. Overwhelmed healthcare. Death rate has been much higher where healthcare overwhelmed (Italy, Wuhan, NYC) than where it hasn’t been.

2. Vaccine development. Current efforts seem likely to produce a tested, approved vaccine in mass quantities by early/mid 2021. Not necessarily enough quantity for everyone on earth, but maybe enough for older, vulnerable, health care workers, and VIPs in rich countries.

So if you’re in a county that has a substantial healthcare system and can afford to procure the vaccine in mass quantity - i.e. any developed country - then a strategy that stretches out the deaths by “flattening the curve” will result in fewer total deaths, first by lower death rate and then by cutting off the pandemic with widespread vaccination.

If you’re in, say, Bangladesh or sub-Saharan Africa, or other poor country, then it probably doesn’t matter what strategy is used. Your healthcare will be overwhelmed regardless, and you can’t afford mass vaccination. There, your thesis may be correct.

Or maybe still not. In the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic, healthcare was ineffectual (no drugs or ventilators) and there was never a vaccine option (technology didn’t exist). I’ve seen charts showing that US cities that took aggressive measures had lower death rates than cities that did not - but I don’t know if that was just for one of the three waves of that pandemic, or for the whole thing.

Sooner or later 04-13-2020 04:52 AM

Also, Sweden has put in limitations. They started off limiting gatherings to less than 500 and then dropped it to 50. They have asked those in risk to self isolate. Many folks have decided to work from home.

Business is still off significantly and currently they are projecting a 6% contraction of GDP this quarter and about 3% for the year. SAS (airline) has cut 90% of it's workforce. Some of the laid off SAS staff is being trained to help in the healthcare system.

They may end up better than everyone else. Still too early to tell.

jyl 04-13-2020 04:59 AM

Of course, the economic effects of a strategy that flattens the curve via aggressive shutdown has huge economic impact.

Only the richest countries can cushion that impact. The USA can, because the US operates on US Dollars and the global dependence on USD means we can “print” a huge amount of USD for at least a limited time. Other countries that operate on their own local currency have some ability to print more EUR, CAD, CNY etc, though their need for USD is something of a constraint. Countries that operate on an external currency - not many, but for example Saudi Arabia, which effectively operates on USD given that all their income is in USD - are in a tougher spot.

So, the USA can have both a death-minimizing strategy and a minimized economic impact, if we can actually come up with the political and bureaucratic ability to execute the necessary steps.

Sooner or later 04-13-2020 05:15 AM

We need to start focusing on specific areas and look at modifying the amount of lockdown in areas that are stabilizing. And what we are locking down.

We damn sure know that a closed space with a high occupancy rate in contact for a length of time is a path to destruction. Nursing homes (high at risk pop account for over 15% of total US deaths, 3621), 240 cases at an Iowa pork processor, cruise ships, aircraft carriers, and churches,

wayner 04-13-2020 06:41 AM

One of the significant things about Sweden compared to many other countries, is the degree to which people have consideration for other people.

As a culture, in a negotiation for example, I want you to be ok with your end of the deal and you want me to be ok with my end of the deal.

This spills over into many other social interactions.
Being considerate in COVID days means, wearing a mask and gloves, keeping you distance, not leaving your infection all over the landscape.

They are not the most huggy or kissy like the Italians.

Meanwhile in another country, the Danes are one of the most non touchy feely people I have ever met.

So, consider a variety of factors beyond the obvious of testing, complete lockdown etc.
There may be alternate actions that can be taken, but if people can't be considerate of each other, then you've got to keep them apart.

McLovin 04-13-2020 07:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jyl (Post 10822392)
the US operates on US Dollars and the global dependence on USD means we can “print” a huge amount of USD for at least a limited time.

So, the USA can have both a death-minimizing strategy and a minimized economic impact, .

This is the part I need explained.

Our federal yearly budget (total spending) is roughly $4.2 trillion.

Our total revenue on that spending is roughly $3.8 trillion.

I can see where we have an unexpected emergency and spend/“print” a few hundred billion. And calling that a minimized economic impact on our economy.

But 2.2 trillion? Or more likely $4 or $6 trillion?

We can “print”/spend as much as our yearly budget and that can be accurately described as having a “minimized” economic impact on us.

Please explain. I’d be happy to understand, because maybe I’m worrying about nothing. It seems to violate the “there’s no free lunch” principle, or math as I understand it, but I hope I’m wrong and there’s something going on that I’m missing.

island911 04-13-2020 07:53 AM

Money is but a marker of value. Inflation is typically taxing on everyone. Sitting on hands is typically taxing on everyone.

Pushing more currency on to a smaller working class will likely drive wage inflation unless all of those "non-essential businesses" really don't matter. Restaurants and entertainment ..., maybe we can just put those "non-essential" people on welfare and rely on the efficiencies of the essential workers.

This whole thing really is a huge macro-economic experiment.

berettafan 04-13-2020 08:11 AM

how do you find commonality in these numbers from various countries or even states when some live in cities on top of each other and others are in more rural and suburban areas?

island911 04-13-2020 08:45 AM

It is clear that it is important for many to have Sweden fail miserably, as it will reinforce their mental model of govt directed wide lock-down. --Swedes are of course aware of the problem and taking action to protect the most vulnerable. It's not as if they are doing nothing.

legion 04-13-2020 09:00 AM

Because my state includes the cluster**** that is Chicago, my governor has decreed that only "necessary" medical procedures can be done. That basically means only emergency medicine, which accounts for something like 1% of medicine practiced. We have something like 40 known COVID-19 cases in the county. So our local hospitals are laying pretty much everyone off and forcing pay cuts on the rest. My kid's annual checkups have been rescheduled three times. Far from "overwhelmed", my local medical community is sitting idle and people aren't getting paid. Pretty much anything that can wait is waiting, even if it causes further harm and complications to people later on.

berettafan 04-13-2020 09:03 AM

A Dr friend of mine has been home more than he's been at work over the past two weeks.

McLovin 04-13-2020 09:23 AM

Same here. My friend is a nurse and she has been furloughed and is sitting at home.
She signed up for and will be collecting unemployment soon.

Sooner or later 04-13-2020 10:19 AM

We have several Oklahoma nurses that volunteered and were accepted to work a time period in New York. One being a long time friend of my little sister.


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