• Anger in Sweden as elderly pay price for coronavirus strategy

    From slider@1:229/2 to All on Monday, April 20, 2020 13:01:19
    From: slider@anashram.com

    Staff with no masks or sanitiser fear for residents as hundreds die in
    care homes

    It was just a few days after the ban on visits to his mother’s nursing
    home in the Swedish city of Uppsala, on 3 April, that Magnus Bondesson
    started to get worried.

    “They [the home] opened up for Skype calls and that’s when I saw two employees. I didn’t see any masks and they didn’t have gloves on,” says Bondesson, a start-up founder and app developer.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/19/anger-in-sweden-as-elderly-pay-price-for-coronavirus-strategy

    “When I called again a few days later I questioned the person helping out, asking why they didn’t use face masks, and he said they were just
    following the guidelines.”

    That same week there were numerous reports in Sweden’s national news media about just how badly the country’s nursing homes were starting to be hit
    by the coronavirus, with hundreds of cases confirmed at homes in
    Stockholm, the worst affected region, and infections in homes across the country.

    Since then pressure has mounted on the government to explain how, despite
    a stated aim of protecting the elderly from the risks of Covid-19, a third
    of fatalities have been people living in care homes.

    Last week, as figures released by the Public Health Agency of Sweden
    indicated that 1,333 people had now died of coronavirus, the country’s normally unflappable state epidemiologist Anders Tegnell admitted that the situation in care homes was worrying.

    “This is our big problem area,” said Tegnell, the brains behind the government’s relatively light-touch strategy, which has seen it ask,
    rather than order, people to avoid non-essential travel, work from home
    and stay indoors if they are over 70 or are feeling ill.

    The same day prime minister Stefan Löfven said that the country faced a “serious situation” in its old people’s homes, announced efforts to step up protections, and ordered the country’s health inspectorate to
    investigate.

    Lena Einhorn, a virologist who has been one of the leading domestic
    critics of Sweden’s coronavirus policy, told the Observer that the
    government and the health agency were still resisting the most obvious explanations.

    “They have to admit that it’s a huge failure, since they have said the whole time that their main aim has been to protect the elderly,” she said. “But what is really strange is that they still do not acknowledge the
    likely route. They say it’s very unfortunate, that they are investigating, and that it’s a matter of the training personnel, but they will not acknowledge that presymptomatic or asymptomatic spread is a factor.”

    The agency’s advice to those managing and working at nursing homes, like
    its policy towards coronavirus in general, has been based on its judgment
    that the “spread from those without symptoms is responsible for a very limited share” of those who get infected.

    Its advice to the care workers and nurses looking after older people such
    as Bondesson’s 69-year-old mother is that they should not wear protective masks or use other protective equipment unless they are dealing with a
    resident in the home they have reason to suspect is infected.

    Otherwise the central protective measure in place is that staff should
    stay home if they detect any symptoms in themselves.

    “Where I’m working we don’t have face masks at all, and we are working with the most vulnerable people of all,” said one care home worker, who wanted to remain anonymous. “We don’t have hand sanitiser, just soap. That’s it. Everybody’s concerned about it. We are all worried.”

    “The worst thing is that it is us, the staff, who are taking the infection
    in to the elderly,” complained one nurse to Swedish public broadcaster
    SVT. “It’s unbelievable that more of them haven’t been infected. It’s a scandal.”

    Einhorn was one of 22 researchers who on Tuesday called for Sweden’s politicians to break with the country’s tradition of entrusting policy to
    its expert agencies, and to seize control of Sweden’s coronavirus strategy
    from the agency.

    She argues that the reason why Sweden has a much higher number of cases in
    care homes than in Norway and Finland is not because of the homes
    themselves, but because of Sweden’s decision to keep schools and kindergartens open, and not to shut restaurants or bars.

    “It’s not like it goes from one old age home to another. It comes in separately to all of these old age homes, so there’s no way it can be all
    be attributed to the personnel going in and working when they are sick. There’s a basic system fault in their recommendations. There’s no other explanation for it.”

    Tegnell’s colleague AnnaSara Carnahan on Friday told Sveriges Radio that
    the number of deaths reported from old people’s homes was “probably an underestimate”, as regional health infectious diseases units were
    reporting that many elderly who died were not being tested.

    Bondesson’s mother, who has dementia, is worried, he says. “She is aware
    of most things that you talk about, it’s just that she might have bad short-term memory, on and off,” he said. “She had also been questioning
    the lack of face masks. She thinks it’s really sad to have to be there constantly for weeks and not to know when it’s going to end.”

    ### - so then, 'all back to normal' + the relaxing of lockdowns, basically means they've decided to just let this thing run its course come what may?
    coz the virus is still there??

    which is tantamount to excepting that yes, just about everyone is gonna
    get it at some point, only 20% of which will likely experience more severe symptoms; mostly elderly and those with underlying conditions, a
    percentage of which will indeed die who were prolly gonna die soon anyway,
    so who gives a fuck??

    this would appear to be sweden's rather caviler approach to it anyway from early on, and now everywhere else too albeit, unlike sweden, they've made
    some attempt to slow down the effects of the initial wave by going into lockdown mode...

    an opportunity then to 'thin the herd' of mostly retired or already ill
    people who were only costing a fortune to look after anyway?

    horrible really + imho so utterly callous in so many ways...

    how a civilisation looks after its ill, needy & elderly, revealing only
    too clearly the state of that civilisation?

    somehow i don't think we've passed the audition!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From slider@1:229/2 to All on Monday, April 20, 2020 13:36:14
    From: slider@anashram.com

    Sweden’s unusual approach to fighting the coronavirus pandemic is starting
    to yield results, according to the country’s top epidemiologist.

    Anders Tegnell, the architect behind Sweden’s relatively relaxed response
    to Covid-19, told local media the latest figures on infection rates and fatalities indicate the situation is starting to stabilize.

    “We’re on a sort of plateau,” Tegnell told Swedish news agency TT.

    Sweden has left its schools, gyms, cafes, bars and restaurants open
    throughout the spread of the pandemic. Instead, the government has urged citizens to act responsibly and follow social distancing guidelines.

    The spread of Covid-19 across the globe is triggering different responses across national and even state borders, as authorities struggle to contain
    an outbreak about which much remains unknown.

    It’s unclear which strategy will ultimately prove most effective, and even experts in Sweden warn it’s too early to draw conclusions. But given the
    huge economic damage caused by strict lockdowns, the Swedish approach has
    drawn considerable interest around the world.

    Part of that approach relies on having access to one of the world’s best-functioning health-care systems. At no stage did Sweden see a real shortage of medical equipment or hospital capacity, and tents set up as emergency care facilities around the country have mostly remained empty.

    Death Rates

    As of Sunday, Sweden had reported 1,540 deaths tied to Covid-19, an
    increase of 29 from Saturday. That’s considerably more than in the rest of Scandinavia, but much less than in Italy, Spain and the U.K., both in
    absolute and relative terms.

    Tegnell isn’t the only high-level official in Sweden to claim the country
    may be over the worst.

    “The trend we have seen in recent days, with a more flat curve -- where we have many new cases, but not a daily increase -- is stabilizing,” Karin Tegmark Wisell, head of the microbiology department at Sweden’s Public
    Health Authority, said on Friday. “We are seeing the same pattern for patients in intensive care.”

    Just two weeks ago, the picture was considerably bleaker, and Prime
    Minister Stefan Lofven suggested the government may need to review its
    approach amid the prospect of thousands of Swedish deaths. In particular,
    the failure to protect people in nursing homes has stood out as a clear weakness, which has contributed to higher death rates than in neighboring countries.

    “The protection for people in elderly care should have been better,”
    Lofven said last week. “We need to look closer at what has gone wrong.”

    Yet overall, Lofven’s strategy has won the approval of Swedes, and his personal popularity has soared.

    “I have very high confidence in the Swedish authorities that manage this,” Volvo Cars CEO Hakan Samuelsson said in a phone interview. “It’s a hard balance to strike, but I have full confidence in the measures that Sweden
    has taken.”

    Volvo, which was forced to halt production across Europe and furlough
    about 20,000 Swedish employees, will resume production at its Swedish
    plants on Monday.

    “Our measures are all based on individuals taking responsibility, and that
    is also an important part of the Swedish model,” Samuelsson said.
    The Economy

    Sweden’s Covid-19 strategy may ultimately result in a smaller -- albeit historically deep -- economic contraction than the rest of Europe is now facing, according to HSBC Global Research economist James Pomeroy.

    “While Sweden’s unwillingness to lock down the country could ultimately prove to be ill-judged, for now, if the infection curve flattens out soon,
    the economy could be better placed to rebound,” he said.

    Pomeroy pointed to some Swedish characteristics that may be helping the
    country deal with the current crisis. More than half of Swedish households
    are single-person, making social distancing easier to carry out. More
    people work from home than anywhere else in Europe, and everyone has
    access to fast Internet, which helps large chunks of the workforce stay productive away from the office.

    And while many other countries have introduced strict laws, including
    hefty fines if people are caught breaching newly minted social-distancing
    laws, Swedes appear to be following such guidelines without the need for legislation. Trips from Stockholm to Gotland -- a popular vacation
    destination -- dropped by 96% over the Easter weekend, according to data
    from the country’s largest mobile operator, Telia Company. And online service Citymapper’s statistics indicate an almost 75% drop in mobility in the capital.

    Sweden also recently pushed back against the notion that there’s little to
    no social distancing going on.

    “We don’t have a radically different view,” Foreign Minister Ann Linde said in an interview with Radio Sweden. “The government has made a series
    of decisions that affect the whole society. It’s a myth that life goes on
    as normal in Sweden.”

    ### - a radically different approach, or just that of merely letting them
    die whose gonna die?

    coz it costs the economy less that way?? damn!

    sorry, but i don't like that!

    there's summat very wrong about putting 'money' before people?

    we're a barbaric species! callous & cruel, especially where money's concerned...

    plus it's at times like these i know i defo must've gotten-off at the
    wrong stop coming to planet wallyworld...

    coz i just can't relate to that shit?

    the world is owned & run by uncaring, mentally unbalanced... monsters!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From luckyrat@1:229/2 to All on Monday, April 20, 2020 07:14:32
    From: allreadydun@gmail.com

    the world is owned & run by uncaring, mentally unbalanced... monsters!

    like they use to say in the cult:

    "Welcome to reality"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From slider@1:229/2 to All on Monday, April 20, 2020 16:22:51
    From: slider@atashram.com

    the world is owned & run by uncaring, mentally unbalanced... monsters!

    like they use to say in the cult:

    "Welcome to reality"

    ### - ya never know, maybe in 150 years or so they might all look back and wonder how the fuck we ever managed to live like this/so-poorly/badly? pitifully!

    which presupposes there'll still be anyone left alive by then that is hah!
    ;)

    and because, now Nature 'knows' just how to 'shut our ass down' almost overnight, who's to say it wont use that again whenever it feels it needs another breather?

    maybe we should start being more nice to it :)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From luckyrat@1:229/2 to All on Monday, April 20, 2020 09:01:51
    From: allreadydun@gmail.com

    maybe we should start being more nice to it :)

    maybe we should get our head out of our ass
    when it comes to fear of death . You might
    suppose this paints a weird perception for the
    peeps of the world? no wonder we are fuckin loco.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From slider@1:229/2 to All on Monday, April 20, 2020 17:26:05
    From: slider@atashram.com

    maybe we should start being more nice to it :)

    maybe we should get our head out of our ass
    when it comes to fear of death . You might
    suppose this paints a weird perception for the
    peeps of the world? no wonder we are fuckin loco.

    ### - they don't exactly live in the real world do they huh, they instead
    live relating to an inherited 'idea' of what society's *supposed* to be
    all about...

    and they don't tell their kids any different because they personally don't
    know any different!

    iow: we don't question the first reality we're presented with!

    so then, we gots to get back to the garden again innit eh?

    and where's that??

    right exactly where we are! we're standing on it! only we've rendered it completely unrecognisable!

    (singing...) we paved paradise and put up a parking lot (how true was
    that!)

    :)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From LowRider44M@1:229/2 to All on Monday, April 20, 2020 14:09:05
    From: intraphase@gmail.com

    The Breeze - Clapton
    https://youtu.be/zsqF3p8ORDE

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)