Did Sweden end up taking the best approach?

305,669 Views | 1675 Replies | Last: 1 yr ago by Enzomatic
tysker
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Aggie MoneyWhip said:

Joe Exotic said:

UTExan said:

If we took the projected CV 19 deaths for Sweden by Aug. 4 (10,196-a relatively stable prediction over the past seven days) and extrapolated the same number of deaths per capital onto the US, we would be looking at 320,000 deaths rather than 100,000 to 150,000. I honestly don't think they have demonstrated a successful coping model thus far.


I would absolutely be okay with an extra 170,000 deaths (of mostly people who were on deaths doorstep anyway) to not have to completely shut down like we did. And so should anyone.
Including your parents/grandparents, right? They're ok with that?
Its possible that my parents will die this year, probably not, but possible. I've come to terms with that. It's going to suck but I cant shut down my life and my kid's life because of that possibility. That would be selfish of me.
BiochemAg97
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Aggie MoneyWhip said:

Joe Exotic said:

UTExan said:

If we took the projected CV 19 deaths for Sweden by Aug. 4 (10,196-a relatively stable prediction over the past seven days) and extrapolated the same number of deaths per capital onto the US, we would be looking at 320,000 deaths rather than 100,000 to 150,000. I honestly don't think they have demonstrated a successful coping model thus far.


I would absolutely be okay with an extra 170,000 deaths (of mostly people who were on deaths doorstep anyway) to not have to completely shut down like we did. And so should anyone.
Including your parents/grandparents, right? They're ok with that?
Let's turn it around. Shutting down and tanking the economy will cause a drastic increase in suicides, roughly 1% increase in suicides for every 1% increase in unemployment based on historical trends in the US. Would you be ok with it if one of your kids/siblings was going to commit suicide because of it?

Still a dumb emotional appeal, but if you are going to go with the "if it saves one life" then at least balance it with the lives it will cost.

Also, note those lives are generally not going to be the elderly, but rather the prime earning age people who are now out of work and in deep financial trouble. Cost benefit analysis should consider years of life lost, not just absolute lives.
fig96
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
I see we're again at the point of "people who are concerned about the economy want everyone to die" and "people who are worried about everyone's health don't care if others starve".
chimpanzee
How long do you want to ignore this user?
fig96 said:

I see we're again at the point of "people who are concerned about the economy want everyone to die" and "people who are worried about everyone's health don't care if others starve".
Yes. This, like everything else is about latching on to some moral high ground to advance whatever else it is that you had on your political wish list. Demonize your opponents in cartoonish terms, make them make a decision and then blame them for the tradeoffs, no matter the net benefit.
SkiMo
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
P.U.T.U said:

Aggie MoneyWhip said:

Joe Exotic said:

UTExan said:

If we took the projected CV 19 deaths for Sweden by Aug. 4 (10,196-a relatively stable prediction over the past seven days) and extrapolated the same number of deaths per capital onto the US, we would be looking at 320,000 deaths rather than 100,000 to 150,000. I honestly don't think they have demonstrated a successful coping model thus far.


I would absolutely be okay with an extra 170,000 deaths (of mostly people who were on deaths doorstep anyway) to not have to completely shut down like we did. And so should anyone.
Including your parents/grandparents, right? They're ok with that?
But it wouldn't be, we know people over 60 with health conditions and in general people over 70 are at risk. Seeing that 40-50% of all deaths happen in nursing homes (Pennsylvania is at 68%) than we know they need to change policies to protect those individuals. AKA what a true quarantine actually is. We also have a better idea of how to fight COVID so the death rate will not be as steep as it was before.

The largest reason for so many deaths was our failure to protect the elderly in nursing homes. If you truly locked those places down from the beginning we would be looking at roughly 40,000-50,000 deaths at this time instead of 83,000. Sweden shows 50% of the deaths in nursing homes as well. This is a new disease and our old procedures were not ready for it. Even in states that have not been hit that hard yet like Texas we will not see the projected numbers if we quarantine those at risk like what should have been done from the start. We just didn't know how bad COVID would hit the elderly.
Here in Utah there have been 73 deaths as of yesterday. 35 from long term care facilities. That's 47.9%. I think the average age of those that have died is 72 with 76% of those having underlying conditions.
Pumpkinhead
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG

Don't know. Don't have the time personally to try to be digging into Sweden's economic numbers. But maybe some other poster will down the road once this plays out longer.
Squadron7
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Quote:

Including your parents/grandparents, right? They're ok with that?

What about opening back up forces these parents/grandparents out of self imposed isolation?

FWIW, both of my folks are in a nursing home now. Mom says open it back up. I am certain my Dad would too, if he were aware of current events.
beerad12man
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Aggie MoneyWhip said:

Joe Exotic said:

UTExan said:

If we took the projected CV 19 deaths for Sweden by Aug. 4 (10,196-a relatively stable prediction over the past seven days) and extrapolated the same number of deaths per capital onto the US, we would be looking at 320,000 deaths rather than 100,000 to 150,000. I honestly don't think they have demonstrated a successful coping model thus far.


I would absolutely be okay with an extra 170,000 deaths (of mostly people who were on deaths doorstep anyway) to not have to completely shut down like we did. And so should anyone.
Including your parents/grandparents, right? They're ok with that?
Actually yes. Well not my grandparents. They have all already passed away. But my parents(4 of them with step mom/dad all ages 64-69) want to get on with it even more than I do.

We could have saved millions over the last hundred years had we not invented cars. But most accept the trade off. Yes, yes, I know this is killing faster than auto accidents. We all get that. But.....

What exactly is the cut off in acceptable deaths? Because we all clearly have one when it comes to all activities we allow.
ham98
How long do you want to ignore this user?
It seems pretty conclusive that Sweden took the best approach. They are well within their hospitalization capacity and did minimal restrictions.
DadHammer
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
fig96 said:

I see we're again at the point of "people who are concerned about the economy want everyone to die" and "people who are worried about everyone's health don't care if others starve".

The problem with what your saying is that those who want to work are not forcing the scared or at risk to stop their self quarantine. Nobody is forcing anyone to go back to work.

But the Self quarantine group refuses to let those work who wish to work and live their lives.

That is the real problem. You don't have a real scenario.
fig96
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
DadHammer said:

fig96 said:

I see we're again at the point of "people who are concerned about the economy want everyone to die" and "people who are worried about everyone's health don't care if others starve".

The problem with what your saying is that those who want to work are not forcing the scared or at risk to stop their self quarantine. Nobody is forcing anyone to go back to work.

But the Self quarantine group refuses to let those work who wish to work and live their lives.

That is the real problem. You don't have a real scenario.
Actually, you pretty clearly just illustrated the problem.

You've classified everyone into either one camp or the other but it's not a simple black and white issue. You can be both concerned about the economy and public safety, and I'd imagine most people fall somewhere in the middle.
lead
How long do you want to ignore this user?
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/covid-daily-deaths-trajectory-per-million?zoomToSelection=true&country=SWE+USA
pants
How long do you want to ignore this user?
DadHammer said:

fig96 said:

I see we're again at the point of "people who are concerned about the economy want everyone to die" and "people who are worried about everyone's health don't care if others starve".

The problem with what your saying is that those who want to work are not forcing the scared or at risk to stop their self quarantine. Nobody is forcing anyone to go back to work.

But the Self quarantine group refuses to let those work who wish to work and live their lives.

That is the real problem. You don't have a real scenario.
Except that opening a business disqualifies people from their unemployment benefits, right? Not exactly forcing them to end their self-quarantine, but effectively doing it by making it a work or starve situation. Assuming I understand unemployment benefits correctly. I could be wrong.

It's more complicated than most people want to admit, but I'd rather we open. We have to choose between deaths from the virus and deaths from economic toll. With an open economy, there is at least some individual choice.
DadHammer
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Agree, you at least have a choice if we are open. But by the way, many of us did not qualify for any hand outs We get zero right now.
culdeus
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
DadHammer said:

fig96 said:

I see we're again at the point of "people who are concerned about the economy want everyone to die" and "people who are worried about everyone's health don't care if others starve".

The problem with what your saying is that those who want to work are not forcing the scared or at risk to stop their self quarantine. Nobody is forcing anyone to go back to work.

But the Self quarantine group refuses to let those work who wish to work and live their lives.

That is the real problem. You don't have a real scenario.


The biggest issue in my mind is if the schools are closed people can't work. Schools and daycare need a path to opening. The focus on restaurants and masks is a needless and pointless distraction.
twk
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
pants said:

DadHammer said:

fig96 said:

I see we're again at the point of "people who are concerned about the economy want everyone to die" and "people who are worried about everyone's health don't care if others starve".

The problem with what your saying is that those who want to work are not forcing the scared or at risk to stop their self quarantine. Nobody is forcing anyone to go back to work.

But the Self quarantine group refuses to let those work who wish to work and live their lives.

That is the real problem. You don't have a real scenario.
Except that opening a business disqualifies people from their unemployment benefits, right? Not exactly forcing them to end their self-quarantine, but effectively doing it by making it a work or starve situation. Assuming I understand unemployment benefits correctly. I could be wrong.

It's more complicated than most people want to admit, but I'd rather we open. We have to choose between deaths from the virus and deaths from economic toll. With an open economy, there is at least some individual choice.
There are a number of exceptions that they added just for coronavirus that are pretty broad. It would depend on the situation.
OldArmyBrent
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
culdeus said:

DadHammer said:

fig96 said:

I see we're again at the point of "people who are concerned about the economy want everyone to die" and "people who are worried about everyone's health don't care if others starve".

The problem with what your saying is that those who want to work are not forcing the scared or at risk to stop their self quarantine. Nobody is forcing anyone to go back to work.

But the Self quarantine group refuses to let those work who wish to work and live their lives.

That is the real problem. You don't have a real scenario.


The biggest issue in my mind is if the schools are closed people can't work. Schools and daycare need a path to opening. The focus on restaurants and masks is a needless and pointless distraction.

Daycares are still open, aren't they? K-12 will be open as long there is no additional attendance waiver in Texas. The districts will find a way if they are faced with losing funds.
BiochemAg97
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
pants said:

DadHammer said:

fig96 said:

I see we're again at the point of "people who are concerned about the economy want everyone to die" and "people who are worried about everyone's health don't care if others starve".

The problem with what your saying is that those who want to work are not forcing the scared or at risk to stop their self quarantine. Nobody is forcing anyone to go back to work.

But the Self quarantine group refuses to let those work who wish to work and live their lives.

That is the real problem. You don't have a real scenario.
Except that opening a business disqualifies people from their unemployment benefits, right? Not exactly forcing them to end their self-quarantine, but effectively doing it by making it a work or starve situation. Assuming I understand unemployment benefits correctly. I could be wrong.

It's more complicated than most people want to admit, but I'd rather we open. We have to choose between deaths from the virus and deaths from economic toll. With an open economy, there is at least some individual choice.
I would say not choose between A or B but rather balance A and B.

And that is the phased opening plan generally. Keep the old people isolated (most likely to die from COVID, least likely to die from economic issues). Allow other who are less likely to die from COVID but perhaps more likely to die from economic issues to return to work.
tysker
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Quote:

Daycares are still open, aren't they?
Not near us. Overnight and day camps have mostly been canceled already for the summer. I bet we'll see lots of latchkey kids floating around neighborhoods in the coming months. Not necessarily a bad thing socially but in terms keeping virus spread down, I'm not sure closing summer programs was the smartest move.
Knucklesammich
How long do you want to ignore this user?
OldArmyBrent said:

culdeus said:

DadHammer said:

fig96 said:

I see we're again at the point of "people who are concerned about the economy want everyone to die" and "people who are worried about everyone's health don't care if others starve".

The problem with what your saying is that those who want to work are not forcing the scared or at risk to stop their self quarantine. Nobody is forcing anyone to go back to work.

But the Self quarantine group refuses to let those work who wish to work and live their lives.

That is the real problem. You don't have a real scenario.


The biggest issue in my mind is if the schools are closed people can't work. Schools and daycare need a path to opening. The focus on restaurants and masks is a needless and pointless distraction.

Daycares are still open, aren't they? K-12 will be open as long there is no additional attendance waiver in Texas. The districts will find a way if they are faced with losing funds.
Relative is a higher up at TEA. TEA at the commissioner level is advocating to waive those requirements for parents who don't feel comfortable. There are a ton of contingencies on the table to allow for possible second wave scenarios ranging from starting schools in July (district decision) to rotating attendance (m/w and t/th) to eliminating many electives to allow for core curriculum instruction in a more intensive manner.

long/short ISD's are independent so its largely a local decision but TEA is pushing as many flexible options as they can out from what I am seeing. None of them are perfect but rarely is there a perfect solution in something with this much nuance.

I saw a webinar for districts the other day led by TEA where a district in south Texas walked through the benefits that they have seen of starting July. It is not all positives, but the flexibility in that solution is powerful and I expect more than a few districts jump on board.

Everyone realizes how much of our society it tied to kids being school...be it educating for the future or providing child care during the work day 36 weeks out of the year.

Edit to add the other thing to look at is revenue pool for funding given the lost sales tax and other revenue streams for state coffers have to be taken into consideration.

Aston04
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Rotating attendance would not fix any problem and would create chaos for parents.

The regular flu is a far greater danger to kids- send them back to school. They need to learn. That's not happening by and large with e-learning.
BiochemAg97
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Aston04 said:

Rotating attendance would not fix any problem and would create chaos for parents.

The regular flu is a far greater danger to kids- send them back to school. They need to learn. That's not happening by and large with e-learning.
It splits the student population in half. So you only get half the school sick at a time if you deep clean every night. Works better if you also split the teachers and staff, which is unlikely.

Allowing more social distancing in the classroom wouldn't matter if the kids all still sit next to each other at lunch.
GAC06
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Aren't there numerous studies showing that kids basically don't get or spread the virus?
ham98
How long do you want to ignore this user?
GAC06 said:

Aren't there numerous studies showing that kids basically don't get or spread the virus?
They get it. They just are able to beat it really easily compared to older adults. Sheltering kids is the wrong strategy overall. We need them to all get china virus during the summer so they can protect school district employees with their immunity in the fall.
tysker
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
ham98 said:

GAC06 said:

Aren't there numerous studies showing that kids basically don't get or spread the virus?
They get it. They just are able to beat it really easily compared to older adults. Sheltering kids is the wrong strategy overall. We need them to all get china virus during the summer so they can protect school district employees with their immunity in the fall.
With as quickly as thing supposedly spreads we could probably get immunity to damn near every kid in the US by the middle of March, if we really wanted to.
Aston04
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
BiochemAg97 said:

Aston04 said:

Rotating attendance would not fix any problem and would create chaos for parents.

The regular flu is a far greater danger to kids- send them back to school. They need to learn. That's not happening by and large with e-learning.
It splits the student population in half. So you only get half the school sick at a time if you deep clean every night. Works better if you also split the teachers and staff, which is unlikely.

Allowing more social distancing in the classroom wouldn't matter if the kids all still sit next to each other at lunch.
"deep clean" till the other kids are back the next day to reinfect the building anyway. Covid could near just as easily go through two groups of 750, meeting every other day, as one with 1500 each day. That's just crap done for show that would again be horrible for parents and bad for learning (half the instruction time).
Marcus Aurelius
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
No China must have done the best. Still at "83,000" cases. 1.5 billion population. LOL. Unreal.
goodAg80
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Marcus Aurelius said:

No China must have done the best. Still at "83,000" cases. 1.5 billion population. LOL. Unreal.
Close to perfection. We should everything like them.*






* Sarcasm for those who missed it.
Jim Rockford
How long do you want to ignore this user?
GAC06 said:

Aren't there numerous studies showing that kids basically don't get or spread the virus?

Kids can spread it according to the CDC.
Keegan99
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Jim Rockford said:

GAC06 said:

Aren't there numerous studies showing that kids basically don't get or spread the virus?

Kids can spread it according to the CDC.


Studies in Australia and elsewhere show otherwise.

If the CDC has done an actual study, please link it.
Complete Idiot
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Keegan99 said:

Jim Rockford said:

GAC06 said:

Aren't there numerous studies showing that kids basically don't get or spread the virus?

Kids can spread it according to the CDC.


Studies in Australia and elsewhere show otherwise.

If the CDC has done an actual study, please link it.
Also please link the studies saying kids can NOT spread the virus.

Since I thought it was funny someone cited CDC without proof, and then someone demanded a link to CDC data and referenced other studies they themselves did not provide a link to, I looked myself.

Is this the Australia Study? http://ncirs.org.au/sites/default/files/2020-04/NCIRS%20NSW%20Schools%20COVID_Summary_FINAL%20public_26%20April%202020.pdf

18 people (9 students, 9 staff) at 15 different schools, which I guess means on average 1 case per school, and it also says 2 people caught it from those cases. I am not sure if that would definitively prove kids can not spread it and would like to see more comprehensive data.

It seems odd to me that someone carrying a virus, and we know kids do get the virus, would not be able to spread it. What biologic mechanism unique to children would prevent that? It's easier for me to accept and understand that young people are less likely to have an infection or have an infection that is asymptomatic. I'd like to read more studies on this if both of you can provide them, and hopefully the data helps convince us to open schools in the Fall if not sooner. What I've read has convinced me the disease is incredibly low risk for youth, even less risky than the Flu, but I had not read anything that convinced me they couldn't carry and spread it.
Keegan99
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG

Quote:

18 people (9 students, 9 staff) at 15 different schools, which I guess means on average 1 case per school, and it also says 2 people caught it from those cases.

No, it says two people may have contracted it.

The findings:

Quote:

735 students and 128 staff were close contacts of these initial 18 cases.

No teacher or staff member contracted COVID-19 from any of the initial school cases.

One child from a primary school and one child from a high school may have contracted COVID-19 from the initial cases at their schools.



There was also this from Iceland:

https://www.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/blog/hunting-down-covid-19/

Quote:

Children under 10 are less likely to get infected than adults and if they get infected, they are less likely to get seriously ill. What is interesting is that even if children do get infected, they are less likely to transmit the disease to others than adults. We have not found a single instance of a child infecting parents.


Additionally, as mentioned multiple times on this thread, Sweden has kept K-8 schools open and has not seen adverse affects. If schools were revealed to be a high risk venture, the Swedes would have shut them down. It hasn't been necessary.
Jim Rockford
How long do you want to ignore this user?
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/daily-life-coping/children.html#:~:text=Children%20with%20COVID%2D19,serious%20underlying%20medical%20conditions.

"If children meet in groups, it can put everyone at risk. Children with COVID-19 may only have mild symptoms, but they can still pass this virus onto others who may be at higher risk..."

Not a study. I do not know the basis for their statement.
GAC06
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
https://www.ocregister.com/10-takeaways-from-swedens-controversial-approach-to-the-coronavirus-pandemic

Regarding kids in school:

Quote:

Tegnell said distance learning works quite well in high schools and universities, allowing students to still get their education. But, he says, there is no evidence of big spreads of the virus among children under 16, and there's no evidence of spread from children to adults. The survival rate among those who come to the ICU has been about 80%, Tegnell said. About 85% to 90% of the death toll nationwide is among people above 80 years of age. The recovery rate among younger people is "very high," he said.

BiochemAg97
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Nvm
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.