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COVID-19: Sweden could have ‘herd immunity’ by next month, claims its infectious diseases chief amid row over its rising deaths and relaxed lockdown measures

Parts of Sweden could achieve ‘herd immunity’ next month, leading doctor says

Dr Anders Tegnell says immunity in Stockholm is ‘having an effect’ on virus

The Government has largely resisted calls to impose EU-style lockdown

Its death toll stands at 1,511, with 13,822 confirmed cases of the Coronavirus

By Jack Wright For Mailonline, Published: 11:00 BST, 19 April 2020 | Updated: 15:40 BST, 19 April 2020

Parts of Sweden could achieve ‘herd immunity’ as early as next month, the country’s leading epidemiologist has said as the death toll rises.

The Government is holding out against a total lockdown despite growing calls for ‘rapid and radical measures’ to contain the coronavirus outbreak.

It has cancelled football games and closed university buildings. Restaurants, cinemas, gyms, pubs, and shops remain open. 

Last week, it announced plans for an aggressive testing regime which could see 100,000 tests administered as the number of cases exceeded 13,000.

Speaking to local media, Dr Anders Tegnell, the architect of Sweden’s controversial strategy, claimed that the population of Stockholm – the epicentre of the country’s outbreak – could achieve ‘herd immunity’ as early as next month.

Dr Tegnell said: ‘According to our modellers [at the Public Health Agency of Sweden], we are starting to see so many immune people in the population in Stockholm that it is starting to have an effect on the spread of the infection.

‘Our models point to some time in May.’

He told Norwegian TV: ‘These are mathematical models, they’re only as good as the data we put into them. We will see if they are right.’

Dr Tegnell’s assessment came after the national death toll was recorded at 1,511, with 13,822 confirmed cases.   

Asked about the death rate, Dr Tegnell said: ‘It is not a failure for the overall strategy, but it is a failure to protect our elderly who live in care homes.’ 

Sweden has been described as an ‘outlier’ as it refuses to impose an EU-style lockdown, despite its coronavirus-related death rate rising. 

Currently around 50 per cent of the Swedish workforce is working from home, while public transport has fallen by 50 per cent in Stockholm. The capital is around 70 per cent less busy.

However, Swedes can still go shopping, eat out at restaurants, get haircuts, and send children younger than 16 to class.

The Government has faced rising criticism of its policy, as detractors point to the rising death toll as proof that its aversion to total lockdown is misguided.

In a joint letter published in Aftonbladet last week, more than 900 teachers and school staff said it was physically impossible to practice social-distancing. 

On Thursday, the Swedish parliament passed a new law granting the Government temporary powers to quickly adopt measures aimed at curbing the spread of the novel coronavirus without prior parliamentary approval.  

The new law allows the Government to close businesses, limit public gatherings or shut down ports and airports, as well as a number of other measures. 

‘It is important that the Government has access to more tools in the fight against the coronavirus if they should prove necessary,’ MP Kristina Nilsson argued.

After objections from opposition parties, the bill was amended so that if the Government decides to enforce a measure, lawmakers can vote to rescind the measure if deemed unnecessary.

The new powers came into force yesterday and last until the end of June.

The Government is still prohibited from adopting measures that curtail rights guaranteed by the country’s constitution, meaning it would still need to go through parliament to issue the type of curfews seen across continental Europe.

However, it has not pursued such measures, opting for a softer approach and calling for citizens to take responsibility to follow social distancing guidelines.

The Government has banned gatherings of 50 people and barred visits to nursing homes. It also banned non-essential travel to Sweden from outside the EU.

Some of the country’s top epidemiologists hit out at the Public Health Agency of Sweden, claiming it and the Government was ‘not at all prepared’ for a pandemic.  

‘The authorities and the Government stupidly did not believe that the epidemic would reach Sweden at all,’ Bo Lundback, a professor of epidemiology at the University of Gothenburg, alleged this week. 

Prof Lundback and 21 other researchers urged the Government to reconsider and institute ‘rapid and radical measures’ in a joint article in Dagens Nyheter newspaper.

‘Sweden was poorly or even not at all prepared,’ Prof Lundback added.

But officials insist their plan is sustainable in the long-term, rejecting drastic short-term measures as too ineffective to justify their impact on society. 

Dr Tegnell has defended his limited interventions, telling The Mail on Sunday that he believed that Britain’s lockdown had gone too far.

He told the paper that Sweden was ‘following’ the UK’s original approach of resisting lockdown, and was ‘disappointed’ by Britain’s abrupt U-turn.

‘I am very sceptical of lockdowns altogether but if you ever do them, you should do them at an early stage,’ Dr Tegnell claimed.

He added: ‘So far, what we are doing is working. In a sense we are beating it, and I am confident we are doing the best we can in the circumstances.’

Dr Tegnell has described the virus as a manageable risk, saying: ‘I still go to restaurants. We can’t kill all our services.

‘And unemployed people are a great threat to public health.

‘It’s a factor you need to think about.’ 

Sweden’s economy is also projected to shrink by as much as 10 per cent as the world economy grinds to a standstill – despite remaining mostly ‘open’.

Its central bank has said that proposed changes to the law governing how it operates would limit its capacity to take action in a crisis.

The risks to the Swedish economy could be greatly amplified, it concluded.  

An inquiry last year suggested changes to legislation governing the Riksbank, clarifying which policy tools it should have, codifying its role in maintaining financial stability and giving parliament the final say over the inflation target.

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