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Mari, the Happy Wanderer's avatar

Thanks for the thoughtful dive into the numbers! It’s important to note that Sweden isn’t unique in Europe for combining minimal restrictions with fewer deaths than its neighbors during the pandemic. Switzerland, where I live, provides additional case that lockdowns, school closures, and mask mandates were not effective enough to justify their societal cost. Switzerland had a brief partial lockdown from mid-March to the end of May 2020, and after that some minimal restrictions that were rolled back as soon as conditions improved. In spite of its minimalist approach to pandemic restrictions, Switzerland’s per capita death rate was better than the countries that surround it--all of which had much more draconian restrictions--and was significantly better than that of the US. I wrote about this in my Substack last fall: https://open.substack.com/pub/marischindele/p/this-is-how-we-protect-ourselves?utm_source=direct&r=7fpv6&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web

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David Gustafson's avatar

Very impressive. I wish more writers had your thoroughness. Given the most recent slope of the Norway and Sweden excess mortality curves, I suspect Sweden will soon have even lower excess mortality than Norway.

Do you believe it would be possible to analyze excess mortality from all countries based on this methodology, grouped by how strict the lockdown was? Some countries like China and New Zealand were locked down so long that it may take a couple more years for all the excess deaths to emerge, and I don’t know if lockdown strictness can be reliably determined.

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