@swanny31176 @philos_engineer @Cernovich If you disagree with Oxford University, I’m sure you must have better credentials. What are they? https://t.co/eWfseQ9Ptb
@jucjan @GidMK @DrZoeHyde Re: "She thinks that Sweden and to a lesser extent USA have got it right.." I'm an American living in America. Our country's response, on average and overall, was horrible. Sweden's was also not good. https://t.co/OexwzRN3Md h
@PsychesDagger @drfrankolmos @AlexBerenson @CDCgov Re: "You have no actual way of proving this" Ask Sweden. https://t.co/OexwzRN3Md https://t.co/muSYmmKsHR https://t.co/rIaOdDvgoJ
@ThomasEWoods @drfrankolmos @PsychesDagger @AlexBerenson @CDCgov Re: ""Statistical modeling" said Sweden would have 96,000 deaths by June" Show a model that predicted that. I'll wait. https://t.co/27azsfS1dw https://t.co/muSYmmKsHR https://t.co/ikHg921Y
@MoritzBonafide @GidMK @Adam_Creighton Re: "Sweden had very lax restrictions and you can’t even tell when the pandemic occurred..." Stop trolling, Moritz https://t.co/FBf7dzRoQs https://t.co/tLafSIymkR https://t.co/muSYmmKsHR https://t.co/QVrw1Obd51
@AlexBerenson Re: "Three graphs from Sweden tell the entire story of #COVID19; deaths by day, positive tests by day, deaths by age. Remember: Sweden had NO lockdown." Stop trolling, Berenson. https://t.co/LrubfdKvC1 https://t.co/muSYmmKsHR https://t.co/
@Damian_Roy @isabelrodbar Re: "Netherlands had lockdown light. Italy had lockdown heavy. Germany had somewhere in between. So there are gaping holes in this logic." Not at all. People with expertise in this topic have thought it through. https://t.co/id
@luigi_warren @DocMcQuinn Re: "Stockholm has attained HI in the context of a sustainable public health response (no lockdown)" Already established they didn't attain herd immunity. And it's up to their population how many excess deaths they can put up w/
@venkysplace Re: "How do you explain Sweden other than burnout/t-cell cross immunity lowering the threshold for herd immunity?" It's not herd immunity. https://t.co/OctJSGWcU8 https://t.co/muSYmmKsHR https://t.co/qumliz5ykg
@gummibear737 Re: "-Stockholm may be proof that its as low as 7-20% -I can't think of any other confounding factors (besides weather) to explain decrease" Really, @gummibear737? Really? https://t.co/rNZoqFZHvx https://t.co/W93bNBMots https://t.co/FZYIGc
@P_Charles_ID_Dr @MoritzBonafide @FatEmperor Re: "No it's not." @MoritzBonafide's tactic seems to be to ask questions, and then willfully ignore answers given, usually by moving the goalposts to another topic. So I'm not going to let them move topics, un
@graphguy77 @WodanOfAsgard @OWingsgirl Re: "it does not in any shape or form refute the first one I presented." No, it actually does refute it. Your source (Tony Heller) deceptively cherry-picked to avoid countries around Sweden that locked down + had le
RT @ExoExplorer3: @rfsquared @nataliexdean Mortality almost tripled in Stockholm during peak, and 47% of CoV-2 deaths actually occurred in…
@andnil83 @akaRaulVasquez @GovEvers So yes, @andnil83, I considered what u brought up before I wrote the Medium post. That's why I cross-checked peaks in cases/day, COVID-19 deaths/day, and proportion of who test positive. I then looked into changes in mob
@JacobGudiol @akaRaulVasquez @GovEvers Re: "No, not in this case. That's explained in the thread" As mobility spikes, cases/day spike, followed by a spike in deaths/day. That's not random; that's biology, and indicative of no herd immunity. https://t.co/
@PaulDella2 @MWodsworth @JohnRuddick2 Re: "False, explain Sweden then" https://t.co/QBlLyZhlgB https://t.co/muSYmmKsHR https://t.co/CC406dN1lV
@kksheld Do you really think Sweden and NY are comparable? That's so cherry picking. That's the same as comparing Sweden to Vietnam saying Sweden did a terrible job. To read about Sweden "success": https://t.co/3qNRfssxVk
@caesoma @therealrthorat @KenMathis @Cornvelious_Dan @mlipsitch @jameshamblin Yup. A number of strategies are feasible, depending on resources available, whether restrictions a country's constitution allows it to use, etc. Some work better than others, dep
@EmraniMd @benshapiro Re: "Has anyone offered a good explanation of how Sweden managed to contain the pandemic?" https://t.co/muSYmmKsHR https://t.co/465o5NTFhA
@Dierenbach @MrRoscoeDog1 @chrisvanderveen Re: "Article seems" Data is how we learn about the world. Re: "Those multiple peaks are a reflection of changing behavior, thus changing R0 - Sweden has been very consistent." No, it hasn't. https://t.co/OqbnP
@RWarehall @rannanto @FormerNewspaper @Yamiche @Acosta Re: "Looks a lot like the seasonal flu. It spreads quickly, infects about 15-20% of the population and slows down, probably running out of susceptible people to spread to" Not so. https://t.co/u2pARC
@KenMathis @therealrthorat @Cornvelious_Dan @mlipsitch @jameshamblin Re: "Behavior, not herd immunity, kept virus spreading in EU. You now admit it" Yup. https://t.co/u2pARCkrDw https://t.co/muSYmmKsHR https://t.co/tXP9m2SnOV
@marshallpittman @Dickieman8 @SethMacFarlane Re: "Then, why are the current daily cases for Sweden significantly declining?" It's not herd immunity. https://t.co/aUNw0FERPq https://t.co/muSYmmKsHR https://t.co/jNa4iphpZz
@duediligenceguy @MikeVanderwolf @preciesandersom Re: "My original point was that the data show that the predictions that Sweden would see a surge in deaths by late June were wrong" Yet you cite no such predictions from experts. I wonder why. Is it becaus
@MoritzBonafide @Christo69933840 @JohnRuddick2 Re: "If there is no herd immunity and no lockdown then how do you explain this???" Some mild government interventions and voluntary changes in behavior that turned out to be less effective than a prompt lockd
@bfolson18 @uscscreenwriter @CatLadyAnn @MaryManello @CristinaAlesci @Walmart Re: "Yes. There’s no other explanation." And you don't read the peer-reviewed literature in medical science, just as you don't on climate science. Willful ignorance, as usual.
@JamesSurowiecki Re: "Has anyone offered a good explanation of how Sweden managed to contain the pandemic?" https://t.co/W93bNBMots https://t.co/muSYmmKsHR https://t.co/wPtL37Uxas
RT @Fwestander: Inte läst, men accepterad akademisk studie. Managing COVID-19 spread with voluntary public-health measures: Sweden as a cas…
Inte läst, men accepterad akademisk studie. Managing COVID-19 spread with voluntary public-health measures: Sweden as a case study for pandemic control https://t.co/PsOC5bzNUr
@jwesamuel @MaxCRoser Re: "I am concinced that earlier lock down = fewer deaths." Congratulations on being right. https://t.co/muSYmmKsHR https://t.co/VSyVA9VYI6
The Swedish COVID-19 strategy has thus far yielded a striking result: mild mandates overlaid with voluntary measures can achieve results highly similar to late-onset stringent mandates. https://t.co/3EIg4mHfTp
A new study published in the Journal Clinical Infectious Diseases (Oxford), suggests that Sweden’s limited lockdown measures with voluntary public-health measures has resulted in fewer deaths than expected. https://t.co/8Uvwg91DN3
@mihaylov_kiril @GidMK Re: "So Italy/Spain/UK/Switzerland/Netherlands/France etc. achieved the same result as the Swedes, but with lockdowns." That's nice, troll. https://t.co/muSYmmKsHR https://t.co/H2gr1lJtT9
@jsm02 @Laurie_Garrett Re: "So why are cases and deaths in Sweden trending down?" Because of changes in behavior. "The dangerous myth that Sweden achieved herd immunity" https://t.co/W93bNBMots https://t.co/muSYmmKsHR https://t.co/poiYkxGca7
RT @JoannaTeglund: @FallTove Sjukhusdata visar att sjuka människor nekas vård. https://t.co/BOgCD5hd2J
RT @ihcaifoundation: Manejo de la epidemia con acciones voluntarias en salud publcia Managing COVID-19 spread with voluntary public-health…
Manejo de la epidemia con acciones voluntarias en salud publcia Managing COVID-19 spread with voluntary public-health measures: Sweden as a case study for pandemic control https://t.co/aaQvp6Mqe8 @DIMEdecisiones @cochranecentroa @
Managing #COVID19 spread with voluntary public-health measures: #Sweden as a case study for pandemic control. La respuesta de #Suecia a la pandemia del nuevo #coronavirus Una descripción desde dentro. https://t.co/GV9hZi1W3h
Managing COVID-19 spread with voluntary public-health measures: Sweden as a case study for pandemic control | Clinical Infectious Diseases | Oxford Academic https://t.co/FO3ZqkmzEi
@rfsquared @nataliexdean Mortality almost tripled in Stockholm during peak, and 47% of CoV-2 deaths actually occurred in non-ICU setting, explaining why ICU wasn't filled and overflown. Simply a reduced ICU load at the cost of more high-risk patients dying
@isonibell @nickcummings3 @Juice04092 @EricTopol @OurWorldInData So, they had 20% availability, but decided who goes to the ICU nevertheless, while there was availability ? Not all old people that died outside the ICU would have died if admitted. And some
@filbfilb Swedes voluntarily distanced/isolated so much it effectively worked like a lockdown anyway. Stockholm was a ghost town in April. Recent study confirms that https://t.co/tbBBOCxMXu
RT @JoannaTeglund: @FallTove Sjukhusdata visar att sjuka människor nekas vård. https://t.co/BOgCD5hd2J
RT @JoannaTeglund: @FallTove Sjukhusdata visar att sjuka människor nekas vård. https://t.co/BOgCD5hd2J
@SHomburg 2/2 ...cost of decreased survival in patients not admitted." https://t.co/HAuIaHlf5M Da kann man nicht gratulieren!
...of decreased survival in patients not admitted. https://t.co/wmTI2yBJNC @PaulaPasst @Micky7813 @GerdK10 @0zelot @JenniferHapke @ChristianSieme9 @KonProg
@AveMaria2018 @blu3r4d0n @scdhec @SCEMD damage to their kidneys, arteries, & heart. Because the cells with the ACE2 receptors are in all these areas of the body. This article hasn't finished the peer review process, but it shows the narrative being sh
This article sums up #COVID19SWEDEN pretty well. https://t.co/JSTsPQz5HV
@WeareLions3 @YaworskiJenny @uTobian @GovMurphy How does no mask work? Is it may? Or is it not at all?? https://t.co/NwQ8lJFlFM
@903coleman Swedens experiment was a disaster https://t.co/NwQ8lJFlFM
@Jeroens_tweets @bvdstock @demorgen Mannekes, alle landen maakten fouten. Zweden is ook niet het perfecte voorbeeld dat sommigen ervan wilden maken. Dat is mijn enige punt. Ook zij hadden een serieuze piek (ondanks mss minder introducties?). Met ook gevolg
RT @JoannaTeglund: @FallTove Sjukhusdata visar att sjuka människor nekas vård. https://t.co/BOgCD5hd2J
@tonyfrancis66 @brianklaas https://t.co/PSfzgfjceJ Did worst in terms of deaths than neighbors Norway and Finland. Based on this first study.
@FallTove Sjukhusdata visar att sjuka människor nekas vård. https://t.co/BOgCD5hd2J
RT @JoannaTeglund: Sweden has the highest Covid-19 death rate in the world, 40%‼️ of closed cases (🌍7%). Most deaths occurs in non-ICU pati…
Sweden has the highest Covid-19 death rate in the world, 40%‼️ of closed cases (🌍7%). Most deaths occurs in non-ICU patients. People die denied health care. 🌍average: 5% require ICU 🇸🇪now 59,600 cases, 92 at ICU = 0,15% 2,516 admitted at ICU, 5,482 died h
https://t.co/XryLgYHByr 333/x 🇸🇪
RT @kassonlab: #CID paper with @kamerlinlab starting to impact public discourse. https://t.co/VlewgI0U8i https://t.co/4yjYD5qck6
RT @kassonlab: #CID paper with @kamerlinlab starting to impact public discourse. https://t.co/VlewgI0U8i https://t.co/4yjYD5qck6
@yaahuh This study from the University of Virginia Health System and Sweden’s Uppsala University indicates COVID-19 caused the extra deaths. https://t.co/hNWlyNicCH
RT @kassonlab: #CID paper with @kamerlinlab starting to impact public discourse. https://t.co/VlewgI0U8i https://t.co/4yjYD5qck6
Academic Manuscript: Managing COVID-19 spread with voluntary public-health measures: Sweden as a case study for pandemic control https://t.co/eJWtuYavge
Super interesting paper! Very much worth the time for the read! And it makes me wonder whether one could bank on such a large (and quite crucial!) amount of voluntary compliance in the US...
#CID paper with @kamerlinlab starting to impact public discourse. https://t.co/VlewgI0U8i https://t.co/4yjYD5qck6
@comradejep @Nattjager @frojdepinnen @justin_hart @GovernorTomWolf @JohnFetterman @SecretaryLevine “this policy causes more healthcare demand and mortality than early stringent control and depends on continued public will.” https://t.co/5UFitLwWRR
@curryja Further confirmation on Sweden's less stringent measures + that behavioral changes occurred, but weren't as effective as early lockdowns: https://t.co/bfMcOVIF3k https://t.co/w7TfWsn6jr https://t.co/xNq28C1IeQ https://t.co/tOuCPPqR9h https://t.
Med facit i hand har de nu skruvat på modellen så att den stämmer med hur det blev. Den här gången vill de att vi ska tro att 80-plussare gallrades ut från vården. https://t.co/zsiQB2HD9Y https://t.co/BjsTv7c9zG
https://t.co/Ah4QBKCbHa Conclusions: The Swedish COVID-19 strategy has thus far yielded a striking result: mild mandates overlaid with voluntary measures can achieve results highly similar to late-onset stringent mandates (United Kingdom)
Ett nytt paper om Sveriges smittskydd: Resultatet var lite bättre än ett sent insatt kraftigare smittskydd. Men priset var att vi lät folk dö utan att försöka få dem att överleva. https://t.co/XnEjyarFYC https://t.co/UrphuloNr3
@AgnesWold @m64592954 Jag kunde inte låta bli då jag kände på mig att det skulle vara illa. Så här ser alltså deras modell ut nu. 🤷♂️ https://t.co/cVfkLs2hcL https://t.co/9xl9SXXn9M
@ProfJohnDrury @devisridhar Apologies for being cryptic previously; we had a paper under embargo that I think might be relevant. Swedish infection curve and mortality can be explained by a fraction of the population voluntarily staying home & socially
Managing COVID-19 spread with voluntary public-health measures: Sweden as a case study for pandemic control. https://t.co/z4SrFHj4DW https://t.co/IC1lAenK7S
RT @kassonlab: Excited that our paper on the effect of individual actions in mitigating COVID-19 spread is now out in Clinical Infectious D…
RT @kamerlinlab: "Managing COVID-19 spread with voluntary public-health measures: Sweden as a case study for pandemic control" with @kasson…
And of course the code is all on GitHub!
And of course the code is all on GitHub!
RT @kassonlab: Excited that our paper on the effect of individual actions in mitigating COVID-19 spread is now out in Clinical Infectious D…
RT @kassonlab: Excited that our paper on the effect of individual actions in mitigating COVID-19 spread is now out in Clinical Infectious D…
Excited that our paper on the effect of individual actions in mitigating COVID-19 spread is now out in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Bottom line: keep up the masking, distancing, and staying home. It can have an important effect! @kamerlinlab @IDSAInfo
"Managing COVID-19 spread with voluntary public-health measures: Sweden as a case study for pandemic control" with @kassonlab #JustAccepted in Clinical Infectious Diseases @IDSAInfo https://t.co/OR1It66O8X