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Sweden Did in Fact Lock Down When it Came to Care Homes

by David Crowe
20 June 2020 7:24 PM

by David Crowe

FILE PHOTO: A sign assures people that the bar is open during the coronavirus outbreak, outside a pub in Stockholm, Sweden March 26, 2020. REUTERS/Colm Fulton/File Photo

Sweden has been a political football in the argument over whether lockdowns work. Lockdown enthusiasts point to the higher death rate than in other Scandinavian countries while skeptics point out that the rate is lower than Italy, Spain and the UK. But the more important question is why the death rate is in the middle. The answer is because Sweden actually did lock down, in the most important way.

Before I defend this counter-intuitive position it is important to note that the term “COVID-19 lockdown” is not well defined. In several countries people were confined to their homes, but in other places, such as in my province of Alberta, Canada, people could go out, although they would find that all restaurants, bars, playgrounds, concert halls, swimming pools and shopping malls were closed. In reality every country’s lockdown (and in places like the United States and Canada, every state, province and even city) was different. In Alberta, Canada, when hair salons were opened, massages were still banned, but in Ontario, hair salons were banned but massages were allowed.

Sweden only chose two dishes from the lockdown menu: banning large group events and visitors to hospitals and nursing homes.1I will use the term ‘nursing home’ for homes for the elderly, or seriously injured, who cannot look after themselves, who need help eating, dressing, going to the toilet etc. As opposed to retirement homes where people will perform these functions themselves. Different countries have different terms for the facilities that are provided for the oldest and sickest people in society who do not need hospitalization.

If we were God, we could assign two values to every item on the lengthy lockdown menu: the number of lives saved from death by SARS-CoV-2, and the number of deaths caused by that aspect of the lockdown. Of course we are not God, but there is evidence that the combined effect of whatever menu items were chosen has killed lots of people. For example, calls to suicide help lines and actual suicides are up. In Canada, opioid overdoses have been rising during the COVID-19 panic. Psychological distress among US adults has dramatically increased. We can guess that deaths from alcoholism, mental breakdowns, and domestic violence will also rise, although in many cases it will not be until next year that we have the statistics to prove this.

I am not the only person who believes that the intensity of the demonstrations, looting and rioting in the United States comes from keeping young people cooped up at home, taking away the socialization and stimulation that they get at school, at their part time jobs, at soccer practices, shooting hoops or just hanging out at the beach, park or shopping mall. Now that the murder of George Floyd by four white policemen has blown the lid off the pressure cooker it will take a long time for the pent-up energy to dissipate. But this is just a belief, nobody can prove that the anger and sometimes violence is partly due to the lockdown and not entirely due to the too frequent occurrence of abuse and killing of black men by police officers in the United States.

But, back to the issue of assigning relative numbers to the menu items. Readers of this article are likely not in the target zone for death by COVID-19. The majority are probably younger than 70, and those who are older are probably not suffering from multiple, serious pre-existing, health conditions. Naturally, you will see the effect of the lockdown on yourself most intensely, and may ignore the parts that do not affect you. During times and places where home confinement was mandated you couldn’t go out, you couldn’t visit relatives, you couldn’t go for a coffee with a friend, you couldn’t exercise, you couldn’t go for a drive, you might have had to try to juggle online work with online education of your children. You probably didn’t think about the people in nursing homes who were cocooned (to use a phrase recently employed on lockdownskeptics.org), out of sight, out of mind. If anything, you thought that perhaps their isolation had occurred too late, that the practice was protective, and if you had criticisms it might have been of events like the New York governor sending patients from hospitals to nursing homes where they could spread the virus, or that the banning of visitors occurred too late.

Each of our imagined relative numbers for the deaths from each lockdown menu item is the product of two factors: the likelihood of killing one person, and the number of people affected. Given that in many countries it is mostly old people in nursing homes or hospitals who are dying, we need to ask what aspects of the lockdown are most likely to harm these people. They are not affected by restaurants being closed, or playgrounds, or swimming pools, because they cannot use these facilities. But is the effect of their isolation in nursing homes (or hospital wards) purely benign, and protective from COVID-19? Are there any dangers?

I postulate that, in fact, the largest relative number for lockdown harms should be assigned to the dangers of banning visitors from nursing homes and hospitals, and the removal of almost all social contact from these frail old people. This may be the most dangerous aspect of the lockdown due to the severe impact on the elderly people housed there, and due to the large number of people affected (the largest portion of the population with deaths blamed on SARS-CoV-2). On this basis, Sweden, having banned visitors to nursing homes and hospitals like virtually every other European country, has a lockdown that is similar in negative affects to other western countries, hence the similar mortality rate.

Nursing Homes Under Lockdown

What is going on in nursing homes? Unless you work in one you are banned from entering, so it is difficult to know, but one can hypothesize a list of effects of the banning of visitors and the further isolation of residents within the nursing homes:

  • Workers will be scared to death of being infected by their patients and therefore will keep contact to a minimum.
  • Some workers will quit resulting in others being overworked.
  • Other workers will test positive by the flawed COVID-19 RNA test and will be quarantined instead of working, for up to two weeks.
  • The role that visitors play in ensuring that their loved ones are not neglected, not treated in unsanitary ways, and not abused will be removed.
  • The assistance that visitors give the staff, in feeding their loved ones, helping them dress, and so on, will be gone.
  • Any resident who is suspected of being infected will be confined to their room.
  • Eating together will be banned.
  • All social events will be cancelled.
  • All outings will be cancelled.
  • All non-essential health services, such as physiotherapy or exercise classes will be cancelled.

That there were horrors that were mostly hidden was actually known quite early, when in late March the Spanish army found abandoned people and dead bodies in nursing homes that they entered, because the staff had fled, out of fear.

More recently, we have more details on the nightmare within the nursing home walls, thanks to the Canadian Military. Soldiers were asked to go and assist in five of the most problematic nursing homes in Ontario, Canada, by the government, and what they saw shocked them so much that they wrote a detailed report to their superiors, which was released to the public, and needs to be read by everyone.

Awful treatment, that can easily be seen as leading to death, includes the following (read the entire report to be even more shocked):

  • Unsanitary practices with parenteral (tube) feeding including liquid food that has curdled.
  • Unsanitary catheter practices, and leaving them in too long (3 weeks in one patient).
  • Fear of using supplies in a cost-conscious private facility.
  • Wound changes that do not preserve sterility.
  • Lack of wound care supplies, and consequent delayed changing of bandages.
  • No mouth or eye care supplies.
  • Poorly trained staff.
  • Lack of staff (1 RN for 200 residents in one case).
  • Patients sedated just because they are anxious, sad or depressed.
  • Aggressive and rough treatment by staff.
  • Forceful feeding and hydration leading to choking and aspiration.
  • Leaving food in the mouth of a sleeping patient.
  • Insufficient turning of patients in bed to prevent bed sores.
  • Patients left in soiled diapers.
  • Putting diapers on patients instead of letting them go to the toilet.
  • Patients crying for hours without getting attention.
  • Not putting patients in wheelchairs but leaving them in bed continuously.
  • Taking mobility aids away from patients so they don’t wander.
  • Cockroaches and flies.
  • Trays stacked with rotten food.
  • Lack of feeding and hydration.
  • No way to receive personal supplies from outside, such as magazines, snacks, shampoo, and soap.

These horrifying practices of abuse and neglect need to be added to the intended neglect, the removal of virtually all sources of stimulation.
We could compare what is left for these unfortunates to the “Joy of Life” standards for nursing homes in Norway. They define five dimensions that they believe contribute to a nursing home that provides the best possible care:

  1. Positive relations: Relations with caring and loving family members and friends. Being cared for by a positive healthcare staff.
  2. Belongingness: The need of belonging to someone and the necessity of having someone to belong [to]. The need [to] love and care for someone and [to] be loved and cared for.
  3. Sources of meaning: Participating and engaging in daily activities, being valuable to others and [capable] of helping others. Make their own decisions in daily life.
  4. Moments of feeling well: Experience small glimpses of the world outside. Attend social and cultural activities like concerts, theatre, visit a restaurant and being out in the natural environment. Having visitors.
  5. Acceptance: Being able [to accept] one’s life the way it is. Adapting and accepting one’s life situation.

Although standard nursing homes have probably never provided all of these aspects, at least not very well, the lockdown of old people, the banning of visitors, the panicked and overworked staff, has resulted in a complete and absolute removal of anything that could contribute to the “Joy of Life”. Did anyone ask even a single resident whether they would like to take their chance on the virus and continue to live life as normal?

The Canadian Forces report briefly mentioned sedation, but Spanish medical documents indicate that this is the solution when hospitals don’t want nursing home patients which, in Spain, is all the time right now. SECPAL, a Spanish palliative care society, writes (my translation):

In patients with COVID + a poor prognosis, and poor control of symptoms, who are not candidates for treatment in an ICU it could indicate that palliative sedation is necessary when the ordinary treatment is insufficient, and symptoms cannot be controlled.

Palliative sedation is performed with Midazolam, a benzodiazepine medication, that has a side effect of suppressing efforts to breathe. If the maximum dose of Midazolam is reached, then Levomepromazine should be used instead, a neuroleptic drug. Some of its side effects include on blood pressure and the heart.

It is important to understand that these patients may have health conditions that could be treated, and that untreated may cause pain. Sedation will not make the cause of the pain go away, but as the pain increases the patient will be pushed closer and closer to a coma.

Finally, the SECPAL recommendations suggest the removal of various types of medication, but also hydration. Lack of hydration will lead to death.
Little is known about the specific situation in Sweden, but according to a BBC report, workers are coming forward to state that transfer of residents to hospitals is discouraged, and that nursing home staff are not allowed to administer oxygen without the approval of a doctor.

Conclusions

I believe that the isolation of patients in nursing homes has not prevented deaths, but has caused deaths. Elderly, infirm people have nothing to live for any more, and poor care and abuse can no longer be observed, and stopped, by visiting friends and relatives. Underpaid staff, those who have not quit or been put in quarantine, are even more overworked than normal, resulting in poor care, frustration and abuse. Hospitals do not want nursing home patients, and the recommended alternative for the nursing home is to sedate and, if that doesn’t work, sedate some more.

Sweden, like virtually every other country, imposed an absolute ban on nursing home visitors. If this is the most destructive part of the lockdown then it is fair to say that Sweden did actually lock down when they banned visitors to nursing homes on March 31st, and this explains why its death rate is in the middle of the pack. We will never know if Sweden would have had a far lower death rate if the doors of their nursing homes had been left open to the outside world.

David Crowe is a Canadian independent researcher of infectious disease models and the host of a weekly radio show in Canada called The Infectious Myth.

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6 Comments
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steve_z
steve_z
3 years ago

“Yet another nail in the coffin of the zero-Covid policy.”

But Devi Sridhar wrote a book about where everyone went wrong (not early enough and not hard enough presumably)

14
0
Hopeless - "TN,BN"
Hopeless - "TN,BN"
3 years ago
Reply to  steve_z

Par for the course. She’s one of Schwab’s “Young World Leaders”, along with Trudeau and some other not-so-young half-baked tyro despots, and it thus follows that everything she comes out with is so much ordure.

10
0
stewart
stewart
3 years ago
Reply to  steve_z

And by all accounts the WHO is working on a treaty to remedy that exact problem so that “next time” they can go in early and hard.

3
0
Rogerborg
Rogerborg
3 years ago
Reply to  stewart

Are these the accounts from anyone credible? I’ve asked to see the receipts on this one before, and the evidence didn’t support the claim.

0
0
ImpObs
ImpObs
3 years ago
Reply to  Rogerborg

EU council: https://archive.ph/j0O0e

actually it’s the WHO infographic, EU council only published it

more links in here: https://corbettreport.substack.com/p/globalists-release-timeline-for-health

Last edited 3 years ago by ImpObs
1
0
Hopeless - "TN,BN"
Hopeless - "TN,BN"
3 years ago

Not surprising. I was waiting for something to be sent to me from China, but the shipment tracking came to a full stop. Further enquiries with the China end informed me that the carrier’s business and warehouse had been locked down by the provincial government, for an initial period of 10 days, or perhaps longer.

3
0
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
3 years ago
Reply to  Hopeless - "TN,BN"

or someone is desperately trying to FUBAR global trade.

11
0
DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
3 years ago
Reply to  TheyLiveAndWeLockdown

A welcome re-appearance of ‘FUBAR’; it’s been away for far too long!

2
0
marebobowl
marebobowl
3 years ago
Reply to  TheyLiveAndWeLockdown

Exactly.

0
0
crisisgarden
crisisgarden
3 years ago

I just simply don’t believe any aspect of this story. China has a Covid crisis because the CCP wants or needs a Covid crisis. The Chinese leadership is too smart and too savvy to cause economic damage because of a relatively minor outbreak of a now exceptionally weak and insignificant respiratory virus. They’re playing the same games now as the West has been playing for two years.. Why?

41
0
RW
RW
3 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

Because they’re not smart and savvy. On average, people are pretty stupid and they are doing stupid stuff all the time. This includes people whose only relevant skill is CCP-internal politics. Xi has boxed himself in with his Zero COVID strategy. He can’t admit that it was a stupid idea which was bound to end in a dismal failure, hence, he has to press on.

9
0
stewart
stewart
3 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

It’s not a small point that China does not really have a national health service. If people need medical attention on mass, they have no where to go.

My default position on China with regards to COVID from day one was that if the population required mass medical attention the CCP was going to be found out for the con job it really is.

The hospitals built in a few days, the armies of people in hazmat suits, it’s all smoke and mirrors. They can do that at a relatively small scale. But they can’t deploy that sort of thing across the country. Not even in their wildest dreams.

So any disease that causes a substantial uptick in those requiring medical care will expose a system in which medical treatment is paid out of pocket and only really available for the well to do. And even for them the system would be badly stretched.

It would basically be a catastrophe for the CCP.

6
0
marebobowl
marebobowl
3 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

Because they are part and parcel of the great reset. What were they promised or paid?

0
0
Old Bill
Old Bill
3 years ago

Disney world and the covid scamdemic seem to have an awful lot in common to my mind.

19
0
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
3 years ago
Reply to  Old Bill

One of them is a place with lots of rules and uniformed people spouting things only children could believe and the other is Disneyland.

25
0
Rogerborg
Rogerborg
3 years ago
Reply to  TheyLiveAndWeLockdown

My understanding is that the Magic Kingdom is a happy hunting ground for ruthless predators, and that the harm done to their child victims is hushed up.

So, yes, same-same.

4
0
Emerald Fox
Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  Old Bill

Xi has a ‘special relationship’ with Disney.

pooh.jpg
2
0
Richard Austin
Richard Austin
3 years ago

Well, if you create a virus and not a way of stopping it, you get no Mickey Mouse. What kind of idiots create a bug and do not know how to stop it? The Chinese and Tony Fauci.

11
0
marebobowl
marebobowl
3 years ago
Reply to  Richard Austin

The Americans were involved in this bioweapon.

0
0
Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago

NOT. AGAIN.

5
0
stewart
stewart
3 years ago

The zero-covid policy is one that regards the population like a herd of cattle and the state is like the farmer. In such a society, your body is not yours, it belongs to the state and it can test you, isolate you, vaccinate you at any time it decides. You are quite literally a slave of the state.

And that is what our overlords aspire to for us as well.

14
0
Rogerborg
Rogerborg
3 years ago

Last I checked, these “health” measures are being imposed in provinces and newish cities with a high proportion of Cantonese and Hakka speakers, and mobile migrant workers.

I’d suspect this may be their ruling class reminding uppity vassal groups that all comrades are equal, but Mandarin comrades are more equal than others.

7
0
J4mes
J4mes
3 years ago

Have they got round to locking down chickens yet?

5
0
Martin Frost
Martin Frost
3 years ago

Zero Covid was always a pipedream. Interesting that those who have practicised it the hardest are experiencing the biggest waves now. What are these authoritarian leaders seeking to prove exactly? That their strategy will work if only it is applied long and hard enough? 40 years to eradicate smallpox and it still emerges from time to time. Personally I blame the reverence accorded to this handful of fringe scientists (aka as THE science”) by a fawning media. For christ sake most of them are not even qualified to comment on these issues.

Last edited 3 years ago by Martin Frost
6
0
civilliberties
civilliberties
3 years ago

May as well go to the doc and get a prescription for deja-vu

3
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
3 years ago

That’s another downer. Well it would be if I was planning on going to China and Disney land. Fortunately I’m planning neither, so I couldn’t give a F.

4
0
David Beaton
David Beaton
3 years ago

Disney closing? Lucky Chinese!

4
0
Cristi.Neagu
Cristi.Neagu
3 years ago

They’re getting ready to release a new virus upon the world, mark my words.

2
0
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
3 years ago

European Energy Policy
https://rumble.com/vxvwpi-european-energy-policy.html?mref=6zof&mc=dgip3&utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=tonyheller&ep=1

Perhaps Europe shouldn’t have planned their energy future around the rantings of a truant teenager?
Tony Heller

Next Events

Tuesday 22nd March 2pm to 3pm
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Junction A332 Windsor Rd/ 
A330 Winkfield Road  
ASCOT SL5 7UL

Stand in the Park Sundays from 10am – make friends & keep sane 

Wokingham Howard Palmer Gardens 
(Cockpit Path car park free on Sunday) 
Sturges Rd RG40 2HD  

Telegram http://t.me/astandintheparkbracknell

3
0
PeteBell
PeteBell
3 years ago

Closing Disney land? 3 hearty cheers for the disease, or rather the reactionto it! ANYTHING that adversely affects the crass Disney franchise can’t be all bad.

1
0
marebobowl
marebobowl
3 years ago

What is up with China? Is China willing to let its workforce starve to death, locked up in their homes. What about China’s goal to become the world leader? Surely you cannot achieve that goal when your entire country is locked up. I smell a big rat.

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