125 new #covid19sverige deaths reported this week and 35302 new confirmed infections for the 7 days until Thursday, decreases of about 7.5% compared to the previous 7-day period.

Total deaths now 14048.

Adjusting for date of death and reporting lag, deaths are at about 20/day.
By comparison, that's almost 3 times as many deaths as our Nordic neighbours reported in the past week - combined.
And about 4 times as many confirmed cases - combined.
While Sweden has dropped just below 500 cases/million/day, we continue to be one of the worst hit countries in the world. Out of countries with more than 1 million population, currently only Bahrain (pop 1.4 mill) and Uruguay (pop 3.5 mill) are doing worse per capita than Sweden.
Swedish social media has been full of defences for this, primarily claiming that Sweden is finding more cases due to more testing.

One way of controlling for this is to look at the positivity rate - what percent of tests return a positive result, ie a "case".
If cases are increasing because of more testing, so you're catching more of them, then the positivity rate should be declining.

This is not the case, and we still far exceed our Nordic neighbours, and far above the WHO benchmark of 5% - indicating Sweden is not testing enough.
For a comparison of what large scale testing actually means -

Sweden reported conducting 316107 tests in Week 16.

Denmark is conducting approx 400000 to 500000 tests *a day*, a combination of PCR tests and rapid antigen tests.

The decline in cases in Swede, albeit slow, is however good news and has been apparent for more than a week now, so it would appear to be real, and hopefully sustained.
There are however some concerning signs in Stockholm, with a slight uptick in the last few days. Something to keep an eye on when new data comes in next week.
Hospitalisation rates continue to decline, however ICU appears to have plateaued somewhat. (graph @covidxix)
Over 80% of 70+ yr olds and more than 50% of 60-69yr olds now having received at least 1 vaccine dose, and nearly a third of all adults. We should continue to see a decline in transmission rates, and mortality should start to reflect this over the next week.
Remember though, this virus is not just about mortality. Sweden's case rate continues to be far above the European average.

35000 new cases/wk means 3500 new people with long term health issues. 14000 *new* a month. This will have ongoing massive negative effects on society.

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More from @DavidSteadson

11 Mar
It's the 1 year anniversary of the first reported death from Covid-19 in Sweden. 23 new deaths reported today, and a further 5300 new confirmed infections.

Total #covid19sverige death toll now 13 111.
This is a dramatically higher death toll than our Nordic neighbours, who chose a suppression strategy - get cases down as much as possible - as opposed to Sweden's mitigation strategy - get cases down enough so that healthcare is not overwhelmed.
At the peaks of Wave 1 and Wave 2, Sweden was experiencing around 100 deaths/day from Covid-19. We continue to have around 20-30 deaths a day.
Read 29 tweets
10 Mar
A brief update. 46 new #covid19sverige deaths and nearly 6000 new cases reported today, taking the total reported FHM death toll to 13088. All but 2 deaths are from the last 2 weeks. With lag considered, we are likely experiencing around 20-30 deaths/day at present.
With lag considered, we are likely experiencing between 20-30 deaths/day at present.
Nationally we're averaging approximately 4000 new cases per day.
Read 6 tweets
9 Mar
34 new #covid19sverige deaths reported today, taking the total to 13042. There are 34 deaths with no date of death recorded. These deaths were spread fairly evening over the past 2 weeks, with only 2 deaths recorded earlier. Image
Now that the data is more or less complete, a slowdown in the rate of new deaths is clearly apparent from approx mid-Jan in the cumulative deaths data. This is approx 3 weeks after harder restrictions were put in place.

Yes @SwedishPM, NPI work. Image
This is also clear on the 7 day average of mortality, with deaths declining significantly from Jan 14. While the last 2-3 weeks data remains incomplete, a clear slowing in the rate of decline is already apparent from approx Feb 14. Image
Read 10 tweets
12 Feb
Prof Jonas @Ludvigsson yesterday posted a response to questions about why he signed the Great Barrington Declaration. I hope he doesn't mind but I've translated it in to English for those interested, followed by some comments.
First, I disagree with Prof Ludvigsson about "lockdowns", however you define them, not being useful unless implemented early. Stricter restrictions have led to significant declines in cases in country after country.

Less cases=less illness=less death.

He goes on to say he saw the GB declaration from "a global perspective" and was concerned about what lockdowns would do in poor countries.

I find this unconvincing. The declaration itself makes no reference to this.
gbdeclaration.org
Read 16 tweets
12 Feb
#covid19sverige update, Swedish media anti-oroa special edition.

58 new deaths reported today (138 on tuesday and 44 yesterday) taking the death toll to 12428.

Changes this week as far back as Nov 22 (moved to next day), but the majority of additions are in the past 2wks.
Growth in cumulative deaths continues to slow, reflecting a decrease in daily mortality
7 day rolling average mortality I've removed all updates from 2020 to simplify as Excel was complaining about it! Deaths averaging 90 or above from Dec 20 through now to Jan 15, down from a Christmas high of 99.
Read 12 tweets
9 Feb
Right, back to things that matter rather than petty attacks on citizen activists who disagree with the accepted narrative.

There's a pandemic occurring and B117 and other variants on the rampage in Sweden. Why am I optimistic?

First, let's look at this graph.
The outbreak began in Sweden in the beginning of March, and about 3 weeks later the deaths started to mount up, increasing rapidly until mid-April when they began a long, slow decline.

The decline was slower than anywhere else in Europe, but nevertheless a decline.
The question is - why? The obvious answer is that at the end of March, the Swedish government issued various recommendations on physical distancing, working from home etc.
Read 31 tweets

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