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Corona – Nakstad: – The situation in Sweden is critical

Assistant Director of Health Espen Nakstad points out that it seems that Norway has a flatter infection curve than our neighboring countries.

– WHO chief believes that there are now ideal conditions for a new corona variant worldwide. What consequences do you think it could have?

– What the WHO is probably thinking about is that infection rates are at a record high in large parts of the world, and the virus has a greater opportunity to change when many people are infected. So it is clear that we will see subspecies of omicron, and maybe other varieties eventually. But the most important thing is that those variants do not cause more serious diseases, says Nakstad.

Do not know the long-term effects

The WHO has also stated that we are on our way out of the critical phase in the world.

– Probably one thinks of the disease burden around the world and that omicron gives milder disease for most people, Nakstad explains.

– It is clear that when very many are infected at the same time, some also become seriously ill than if there were few infected, Nakstad emphasizes.

He also emphasizes that it is not known how the long-term effects are related to the omicron variant.

Denmark has had a great deal of contagion pressure recently, but few people need respiratory treatment.

– What we have seen in Denmark is that they have had quite a few hospitalized with covid-19 as a co-diagnosis – which means that they are in the hospital for another reason, but are diagnosed with infection which is also included in the figures. In addition, more are being tested in Denmark, so the proportion of positives has been higher in Denmark.

He believes that it is best to look at the intensive care units – and there we see that Norway has had more inpatients than Denmark, Nakstad explains.

– A lot of delta infection

– But it also has another explanation. We have had a lot of delta infection. We have simply had many who have been seriously ill with the delta variant, says Nakstad, and explains that it is therefore somewhat difficult to compare the two countries.

– What do we know about other countries that have had high sickness absence for weeks?

– We have no other figures than anecdotal stories from, for example, Sweden, where there have been problematic kindergartens and schools in several places. We also hear from our own health services that you constantly have to change on duty lists because there is constantly sick leave, Nakstad answers.

He says that this is challenging in many countries, but that one can manage to get it to several places.

– As long as you get people to cover the guards who are important – and do not have to shut down businesses, it seems that you can manage this in several places. But in Sweden it is now critical in several places, he says.

– Are socially critical functions in, for example, Denmark and Sweden that are threatened now?

– We do not have a detailed overview from hospital to hospital in Sweden, for example, but we do register that there are kindergartens that report that one in six employees comes to work. It is clear that this affects, but from each week that passes, more people finish the disease and gain immunity, says Nakstad.

– More infection in the last week

Is it appropriate to keep the restrictions in the future? Possibly, when do you think it’s time to ease the measures more?

– This is something you almost have to follow from day to day. It is clear that there is an increase in hospital admissions with omikron now compared to a week ago. But it is not so strange because there has been significantly more infection also in the last week, compared to the week before, he answers.

Absence due to illness, and the number of patients who need treatment, will vary greatly if the infection doubles, or triples, Nakstad explains.

– What matters is how many people we have contact with on a daily basis. And as long as we are at home when we are sick, testing ourselves, isolating ourselves when we are infected, wearing face masks and working from home where we can, most of us will have much less contact with others, says Nakstad, even though cultural events now allows multiple audiences.

– As soon as we get through this wave and things calm down a bit in terms of infection, then there will probably be opportunities to step down further on things, says Nakstad.

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