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  • 2020-04-24 (xsd:date)
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  • Fact-checking Sweden’s COVID-19 infection rate without shutdown (en)
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  • While cheering President Donald Trump’s ideas for opening up America amid COVID-19, the Rev. Franklin Graham suggested on Facebook that Trump’s enemies and the liberal media want a prolonged national shutdown in order to prevent Trump from being re-elected. The Christian minister and son of Billy Graham, the late evangelist, also made a claim about Sweden and its contrarian approach to combating the coronavirus. I read yesterday that Sweden had not shut down, but their people were following social distancing and other protocols with the government stressing personal responsibility, and their infection rate still remains lower than the UK’s, Italy’s and Spain’s, Graham wrote in an April 17 post on Facebook. The post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.) After PolitiFact published a rating on this statement April 24, Graham edited his original Facebook post to remove reference to the infection rate. Data support Graham’s claim about infection rates. But the epidemiologist credited with developing Sweden’s COVID-19 strategy said infection rate is not a reliable indicator of how a country is doing. Sweden goes voluntary, not mandatory Sweden has a population of 10 million people, nearly nine out of 10 of whom live in urban areas; about 20% of residents were born abroad. In contrast to most of the United States, Sweden has imposed no lockdown and no quarantines, although groups of larger than 50 people are banned. With elementary schools, bars, restaurants and businesses still open, though with social distancing and other safety measures encouraged, what’s happening in Sweden seems like something closer to life as most Americans remember it. The idea in Sweden is to essentially pursue herd immunity — let the virus spread as slowly as possible while sheltering the elderly and the vulnerable until much of the population becomes naturally immune or a vaccine becomes available. The infection rates We didn’t get replies when we asked for information from two North Carolina-based organizations led by Graham, the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association and the international relief organization Samaritan's Purse. We found infection-rate figures from Our World in Data. That research organization is funded by philanthropists Bill and Melinda Gates and is led by Max Roser , who is director of the Oxford Martin Programme on Global Development at the University of Oxford. Here are the total number of confirmed COVID-19 cases per 1 million people as of April 17, the day of Graham’s post: Spain: 3,910.1 Italy: 2,794.18 United States: 2,028.17 United Kingdom: 1,518.62 Sweden: 1,241.67 So, Sweden’s known rate of infections is lower than the other countries Graham mentioned (and lower than the U.S. rate, as well). We’ll note that Our World in Data figures for April 17 show that the death rate — the ratio of confirmed deaths to confirmed cases — in Sweden was slightly higher than Spain’s, though lower than the other countries Graham cites. United Kingdom: 13.32% Italy: 13.12% Sweden: 10.63% Spain: 10.46% United States: 4.96% Sweden’s death rate was much higher, however, than the three countries that border it: Denmark: 4.67%; Finland: 2.23%; Norway: 2%. Use caution on infection rates Experts urge caution on reading too much into the infection-rate figures that Graham alludes to. Testing has been focused on health care workers and people whose cases who are serious enough to end up in the hospital, so we don’t know the number of people infected who suffer mild or no symptoms, wrote Paul Franks, a genetic epidemiology professor at Lund University in Sweden and an adjunct professor at Harvard’s Chan School of Public Health. The existing data suggest that the infection rates are probably much higher in Stockholm than in London and a little higher across Sweden than across the UK, he told PolitiFact. Indeed, Anders Tegnell, the epidemiologist who is credited with developing Sweden’s COVID-19 strategy, says infection rate is not a good measure of how a country is doing. The recorded infection rate depends hugely on the number of tests performed and what indications for testing that are used, Tegnell, the director of the Swedish Public Health Agency, told PolitiFact. In other words, an unreliable measure. Asked if Sweden’s strategy has been effective, Tegnell told us: Partly, to the extent that the health system managed the challenge and that there are always free beds. Not so well in protecting the elderly. A surge in Sweden As we were preparing this fact-check, there were reports that confirmed infections in Sweden were rising sharply. For example, according to The Guardian, Sweden reported 812 new confirmed cases of coronavirus on April 24, the highest number of new cases in the country yet reported. At the same time, if Swedish studies are accurate, infections and deaths in Stockholm, where more than half of the country’s COVID-19 deaths have occurred, should drop substantially in the coming weeks, Franks wrote on April 23. Our ruling Urging that the reopening of the United States not be delayed, Graham said the COVID-19 infection rate in Sweden, which has no forced lockdown, is lower than in Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom. Infection rates are lower, but that’s not necessarily a telling metric. Experts, including the epidemiologist credited with devising Sweden’s no-lockdown strategy, said there are other reasons, including a lack of testing, not to read too much into infection rates as a measure of how well a country is responding to the virus. Sweden’s death rates, for example, are higher than some of its peers. For a statement that is partially accurate but leaves out important information, our rating is Half True. UPDATE, April 27, 2020 : This story has been updated to reflect that Graham edited his original April 17 Facebook post to remove reference to Sweden's COVID-19 infection rate following the April 24 publication of this fact-check. (en)
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