The Good and Bad Lessons From Sweden

A rising mortality rate suggests the more lax model means more death

Keren Landman, MD
Elemental

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Photo illustration. Photos (Getty Images): alexey_ds; daboost

A funny thing happened in late April: Sweden — 70% marginal tax rate, safety net replete Sweden — briefly became the darling of the American right wing.

The cause of the fandom was the country’s approach to mitigating the coronavirus pandemic’s effects on its population: Unlike most nations, including its Scandinavian counterparts, Sweden did not shut down its economy or schools. Instead, the country’s leaders asked its people to take responsibility for social distancing themselves and banned only gatherings larger than 50 people, allowing schools and businesses, including bars and restaurants, to stay open. (Officials advised people to work from home when possible and avoid nonessential travel, and on March 31, the country issued a ban on visits to elder care homes.)

Sweden’s Covid-19 daily death rate has consistently been among Western Europe’s highest. And while daily numbers of confirmed Covid-19 cases are trending downward in many parts of Europe, in Sweden, they have plateaued, and are trending upward.

Be careful of assumptions

Sweden’s approach relied on several assumptions, some more overt than others. One was that the country’s entire…

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Keren Landman, MD
Elemental

Infectious disease doctor | Epidemiologist | Journalist | Health disparities, HIV/STDs, LGBTQ care, et al. | kerenlandman.com.