WHO/Europe, EC and ECDC urge eligible groups to get vaccinated or boosted to save lives
A new study, meanwhile, shows that Norway’s strict anti-Corona regime may have saved just over 2,000 lives, but at a high cost. Researchers have examined results of the very different approaches taken by health authorities in Norway and Sweden, when Norway all but shut down while Sweden remained much more open.
Norway ended up with among the strictest anti-Corona measures in Europe, lasting from March 2020 and into 2022, while Sweden had the most liberal, according to researcher Per-Henrik Zahl of Norway’s FHI (Folkehelseinstituttet) and his Norwegian and Swedish colleagues. Norway closed all its schools, for example, while Sweden kept its schools open.
Now Zahl and his co-authors have written a new scientific article, evaluated and published in the Journal of Infection and Public Health, that compares mortality rates tied to Covid-19 in the two countries from 2020-2022. “We have calculated how many human lives were spared in Norway compared to Sweden: 2,025, when we imposed extremely strict anti-infection measures until the population was vaccinated,” Zahl told Oslo-based newspaper Aftenposten on Wednesday.
The researchers also determined that Sweden could have saved 3,915 lives if it had adopted another strategy.
The question is whether Norway’s strict strategy was worth the costs, not only in terms of the huge financial investment in its anti-infection measures but also the consequences of, for example, closing schools. The study shows that home-schooling cut the quality of instruction while no such loss of learning is registered in Sweden.
Norway has also experienced a major increase in psychiatric ailments among children and youth after the shutdown. Stockholm recorded an increase in eating disorders among youth, but not the increase in mental health problems.
Norway’s state statistics bureau SSB (Statistics Norway) has also calculated that the country’s overall shutdown of most all aspects of public life cost Norway NOK 270 billion, equal to about NOK 133 million for each life saved.
When Norway relaxed its Covid restrictions, the death rate also rose dramatically. The researchers themselves question whether Norway’s shutdown can be defended when it didn’t prevent more than 2,025 Covid-related deaths “and only delayed the pandemic by a little more than a year.”
https://www.newsinenglish.no/2023/11/08/too-few-getting-re-vaccinated/
Comments (1)
Сложно определить, сколько реально жизней спасено или не спасено. Я видел график "избыточной смертности", и там Швеция на последнем месте в Европе.