Dogbert wrote: ↑Thu Nov 19, 2020 12:51 pm
westport wrote: ↑Thu Nov 19, 2020 11:54 am
There is a poll on how leaders are doing, both are doing crap IMO, and Sturgeon comes out better than Johnson.
They have both done similar things, both crap at it. But comparing Scotland with England as far as covid goes is ridiculous it is better comparing us with countries of a similar population, there are four European countries with populations of five million.
Denmark 5,799,640 757 Covid deaths
Finland 5,545,596 369 Covid deaths
Slovakia 5,462,617 510 Covid deaths
Norway 5,436,637 294 Covid deaths.
Scotland 5,500000? 3280 Covid deaths (over 5000 if you use NRS figures)
What should they have done differently ?
Denmark is always my go to for international comparison with Scotland - size, location, dominated by a big neighbour to the south which is the only land border (ok, there's a bridge to Sweden now), so let's look at them.,
Denmark about 65,000 cases 750 deaths, Scotland about 85,000 cases 5,000 deaths.
The profile of cases was very similar in the early part of their outbreak, and when you look at the timing of lockdown, it was also similar. But the number of cases receded more quickly and their deaths were far lower. From the limited info I can find, the differences seem to be
- the cases fell more quickly after lockdown in the first phase
- they kept the diseases out of the elderly population (I can't find decent info on how they did that)
For the first one the only major policy difference I can see is that they closed their borders, but I doubt that's the sole reason. I suspect cultural differences may have made a difference.
The second seems to be substantially because it didn't get transferred into care homes. You'd need to have a greater understanding of the health and care system than I do in both countries to really analyse why decisions were taken and when. Fwiw I understand why the it was thought to be a good idea to get the elderly out of hospitals in the early part of the pandemic, but the rush to get them away from perceived 'danger areas', i.e. hospitals, meant that it wasn't thought through wrt testing before transfer etc. I think there are two problems here, one which needs to be understood about what was and wasn't considered and done as part of the transfer processes and practices, and one which is a systemic problem about elderly care, delayed discharge etc within the health and care system in Scotland (and the UK) - I've no idea if a similar problem exists in Denmark.
In this wave, they are currently reporting broadly the same number of cases as Scotland (maybe 10-20% fewer) but kicked up to that level several weeks behind us. Their death numbers are still in single figures although given the timings of their increases, you might expect that to rise in the next two weeks. Given the low numbers though it seems that they have still managed to keep it out of the elderly population.