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Sweden shifts on no-lockdown strategy

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/09/23/sweden-shifts-no-lockdown-strategy/
ByRichard Orange <https://www.telegraph.co.uk/authors/richard-orange/> MALMÖ23
September 2020 • 4:53pm

Sweden's state epidemiologist has said that he is now willing to recommend
lockdown measures such as school closures, and strict limits to the size of
gatherings - so long as they are only imposed locally and for three weeks
at a time.

The Public Health Agency of Sweden's new approach
<https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/destinations/europe/sweden/articles/covid-sweden-vs-denmark-vs-britain/>
to
local restrictions, floated first at a press conference on Tuesday, marks
its biggest strategic shift since it launched its no-lockdown strategy in
March.

"We are thinking of fairly short restrictions, to break the spread of
infection requires perhaps two to three weeks at most," Anders Tegnell told
the Dagens Nyheter newspaper in an interview published on Wednesday
afternoon.

"We are still developing the concept, so to say, but something like that."

The country's new strategy comes after its infection level fell from being
far-and-away the highest of any European Union country in mid-May to being
one of the lowest in Europe today. The agency now hopes to keep rates low
by rapidly tackling local outbreaks as they occur
<https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/09/22/stockholm-mulls-local-restrictions-worrying-infection-signs/>
.
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"The restrictions could be extremely local. It could be about a single
workplace or city district: wherever you see a spread and think that there
are restrictions that might stop it,"  Dr Tegnell told the newspaper.

The agency has so far been sceptical of issuing a general recommendation
for face masks to be worn in public
<https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/comment/sweden-really-like-right-now-masks/>,
but, according to Dr Tegnell, it now sees a role for them in helping
control local outbreaks.

On Tuesday, Stockholm's health chief Björn Eriksson warned that the city
was seeing "worrying signs of increasing infection" and said he was in
talks with the Public Health Agency over bringing in local restrictions. He
said these might include imposing quarantine on families where one member
is infected.

Currently, people who share a household with someone who tests positive for
coronavirus are still advised to go to school and work
<https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/destinations/europe/sweden/articles/what-life-is-really-like-in-lockdown-hating-sweden/>
as
normal.

Dr Tegnell said that it was important that the local restrictions were
properly thought through and tailored
<https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/09/04/swedens-coronavirus-strategy-finally-silencing-doubters/>
to
the area on which they were imposed.

"We have seen in Sweden that this has a tendency to hit socially vulnerable
areas, and you've got to keep that in mind," he said.

"That's why I was a bit doubtful about limiting people's movement, because
you need to find restrictions which will be accepted by the group you are
working with and which work in more ways than just infection control."

He pointed to Spain and The Netherlands, where local restrictions have
faced resistance. "But I think this will be easier if we are extremely
clear that this is only going to apply for a short period."
---

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