Michael Bang Petersen Profile picture
Feb 1, 2022 19 tweets 9 min read Read on X
Today, Denmark lifted *all* restrictions, while cases are soaring.

The international reaction: Disbelief.

I am leading the largest Danish project on pandemic behavior & I am advising the gov.

Here is why Danes are still supportive. And what may be learned from this.

🧵(1/19) Image
The graph is from here: ft.com/content/037a3a…. It shows the complexity of the epidemic situation. Cases are extremely high, hospitalizations are rising and deaths are rising slowly too. But people in ICUs are dropping. (2/19) Image
Despite this, a clear majority of the public supports removing all restrictions (nyheder.tv2.dk/samfund/2022-0…). A minority (28 %) is concerned. (3/19) Image
Also, in our @HopeProject_dk we have - every day - tracked feelings of societal threat (hope-project.dk/#/reports/Dans…). They have been dropping sharply the last month and are at the lowest point we have measured. (4/19) Image
Throughout the pandemic, our data shows that the key worry of Danes is not their health but overwhelmed hospitals. In fact, in Jan '22 the average Dane was more worried about lockdowns than their own health. (5/19) Image
Why this lack of worry? Because Danes are highly vaccinated - and our data shows that their trust in the vaccines are high. 81 % of the entire population are vaccinated and 61 % of the population have received a booster vaccine. Vaccines are available from 5 years & up. (6/19)
Furthermore, virtually all infections in Denmark are now omicron. The combination of omicron and high booster coverage decouples infection and severity (ft.com/content/03aa46…). While there are high case counts, the pressure on hospitals is lower than in previous waves. (7/19) Image
The clearest example of this is the drop in ICU (graph by @@mikaelmilhoj). According to @SSI_dk the drop is caused by the shift from delta to omicron infections (covid19.ssi.dk/-/media/arkiv/…). Current excess death is still driven by the delta wave that was crush by omicron. (8/19) Image
Even if many hospitalizations are short and incidental, a cause of concern is that omicron infections haven't topped. Yet, as seen from this graph (by @me_macro) , cases have followed the predicted trajectory and are expected to soon fall, if it is not already happening. (9/19) Image
Another concern is long covid. Our data shows that ~50 % of Danes have such concerns. But vaccines decrease long covid too (medrxiv.org/content/10.110…). And Danish data suggest that long covid in kids is "rare & mainly of short duration" (link.springer.com/article/10.100…). (10/19)
Should Denmark wait until all concerns have been settled? Maybe. But waiting is not free. It has costs in terms of the economy, well-being and democratic rights. Balancing these is an explicit part of the Danish strategy: fm.dk/nyheder/nyheds…. (11/19)
Our research shows that these costs generate pandemic fatigue, which fuels distrust (psyarxiv.com/qjmct/). When well-being has been relatively high in Denmark it is, in part, because measures have been somewhat mild & because they have been relaxed when possible. (12/19) Image
Pandemic management involves trade-offs and there is not one single legitimate strategy. Within the set of legitimate strategies, democratic agreement matters more than the exact nature of the trade-offs. (13/19)
There is indeed broad agreement. Even a majority of the elderly feels safe lifting restrictions (politiken.dk/indland/art859…). Our research shows they feel competent in avoiding infections (bit.ly/3gdbgGS). They have isolated over winter & will likely still do so. (14/19) Image
In fact, the elderly are not even very high in feelings of personal threat. The graph below shows developments in feelings of personal threat from covid across age groups. Those feeling slight increased threat are middle-aged people, who need to navigate high infection. (15/19) Image
So, opening up imposes costs on some. Why do they accept it? My guess is: For the same reason that most young Danes have complied meticulously with restrictions: Trust in authorities and solidarity with society. These have been internationally high in Denmark. (16/19) Image
In return, there is a high motivation to help those at risk, despite that most do not feel that this is a threat to themselves. We see no drop in Danes' motivation to keep distance to the elderly and those at risk. People care and will continue to take precautions. (17/19) Image
Should your country also turn the responsibility to people themselves? It depends on the epidemic & public preferences. But this shows how trust & solidarity entails an acceptance of costs, allowing society to act in agreement. Both when closing down & when opening up. (18/19)
Does this mean it is over? No, we have declassified corona before. But as lockdowns breed mistrust, it is prudent to relax measures when possible. If it is not over--if lockdowns are to be imposed again--societies will need as much trust & solidarity as they can muster. (19/19)

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More from @M_B_Petersen

Feb 8
🚨NEW PAPER🚨

Which societal conditions breed online hostility?

We surveyed experiences of victims in 30 countries across the world (N=15,202) to show that political & economic inequality drive global differences in abuse on online platforms:

🧵 1/12 osf.io/preprints/psya…
Image
Our preregistered study show that experiences of being a victim to online hostility vary widely. West Europeans experience political hostility less than once a month but hostility is much higher in other parts of the world. 2/12 Image
These differences reflect basic societal conditions of inequality. Political equality (i.e., presence of democracy) is highly correlated with online abuse (corr = -.69) as is economic inequality (corr = .45). 3/12 Image
Read 12 tweets
Jan 17
“The unvaccinated, I really want to piss them off. And so, we’re going to continue doing so, until the end. That’s the strategy,” said Macron during the COVID-19 pandemic

In a new article, we show the risks of such moralized cost-imposition:

🧵 1/7 doi.org/10.1111/1475-6…
Image
Similar, but less strong, rethoric was used by the Danish primeminister during a press conference on Nov 8, 2021.

During the time, we collected daily representative surveys of trust in the response etc. in the @HopeProject_dk. 2/7
@HopeProject_dk Our findings show that, as result of the press conference, unvaccinated lost 11 %-points of trust in the response. It also decreased their motivation to contribute to the collective action problem of reducing infections as well as their felt ability to cope with the pandemic. 3/7 Image
Read 7 tweets
Sep 7, 2023
I was asked by the board of the Danish National Research Foundation, @GrundforskFond, to give a talk at their annual meeting.

They asked me to talk under the theme: "Preprints"

Here is what I said 👇

🧵 1/18 Image
@GrundforskFond A key challenge facing the dissemination of knowledge is delays in publication ().

The social sciences are hard hit. 18 months from submission to publication in Economics & this is only *if* the paper is accepted in that journal. 2/18 sciencedirect.com/science/articl…
Image
@GrundforskFond The evidence suggest that the delay is getting worse, not better, over time (). This is mostly due to increased time in review.

Today, there is widespread concerns about reviewer fatigue among journal editors () 3/18 sciencedirect.com/science/articl…
insidehighered.com/news/2022/06/1…
Image
Read 18 tweets
Aug 12, 2023
Klimaministeren bruger befolkningen som undskyldning for ikke at handle ift. klimaforandringer:

Det afspejler manglende viden om både befolkningen og om egen rolle som politiker.

🧵 1/8dr.dk/nyheder/politi…
Borgerne tager klimaforandringer dybt alvorligt. Seneste Klimabarometer fra @concitoinfo viser:

- 88 % mener at klimaforandringer er "meget" eller "i nogen grad" alvorlige
- 72 % af befolkningen mener, at partierne bør gør mere ift. klimaet

() 2/8concito.dk/files/media/do…
@concitoinfo Tal fra @ HopeProject_dk viser, at der ikke er helt aMMW konsensus om hårde instrumenter som skatter og afgifter, men selv er der kun ca. 30 %, der er uenige: 3/8 https://t.co/yV5W77QaHxgithub.com/Hopeproject202…
Image
Read 8 tweets
May 28, 2023
The Danish government has appointed me to direct a 5-year audit of Danish democracy in the 21st century: ufm.dk/aktuelt/presse…

Political scientists can think of Dahl's classic, "Who Governs?", but for an entire country. It is a monumental research challenge.

🧵 1/5
Parliament-initiated studies of power & democracy constitute a Scandinavian tradition. The last Danish study ended in 2003. In the following year Facebook was launched & fundamental societal changes have happened since. 2/5
A core focus is thus how and whether "slow-speed" democracy is fundamentally threatened by current "high-speed" society -- characterised by rapid technological innovation, increasing problem complexity, fast-paced media reporting & rising inequality. 3/5
Read 5 tweets
May 28, 2023
Jeg er blevet udnævnt som leder af den nye magtudredning: ufm.dk/aktuelt/presse…

Det er en monumental opgave, som går igang nu.

I denne tråd skitserer jeg det, der ligger forude, og nogle af de udfordringer, som demokratiet står foran i det 21. århundrede.

🧵 1/14
Magtudredninger er en særlig skandinavisk tradition, hvor parlamentet beder uafhængige forskere om at vurdere om de - og andre magtaktører - lever op til demokratiets idealer og udstyrer forskerne med væsentlige ressourcer til den opgave. 2/14
Én gang tidligere har man gennemført en magtudredning i DK (magtudredningen.dk). Bl.a. under overskriften "et ganske levende demokrati" konkluderede man, at DKs demokrati var robust, og at forskydningerne af magt i høj grad var politisk bestemte & dermed under kontrol. 3/14
Read 14 tweets

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