Chris Jewers For Mailonline
Lockdown-free Sweden's coronavirus case rate is now lower than Nordic
neighbours Denmark and Norway with just 12 new infections per million
people over the past week In comparison, Norway saw 14 new infections per million people, and
Denmark saw 18, meaning Sweden had an average case rate over seven days
lower than its neighbours for the first time since March.
'Sweden has gone from being one of the countries with the most infection
in Europe, to one of those with the least infection in Europe,' the
country's state epidemiologist Anders Tegnell said at a press conference
earlier this week. Meanwhile, 'many other countries have seen a rather dramatic increase,' he added.
At the height of the pandemic, Sweden's infection rate dwarfed that of its neighbours, who did implement a lockdown. At its peak on June 19, Sweden was seeing 108 new infections per million
people, compared to Denmark and Norway's eight and three respectively.
The number of deaths in Sweden is now averaging at two to three per day,
compared to a peak of over a hundred per-day it suffered in mid-April. To add to positive signs in Sweden, a test last week of 2,500 randomly selected people found not one had coronavirus.
In comparison, in a similar test, 0.9 per cent were found to have the
virus at the end of April and 0.3 per cent at the end of May................SOURCE
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