Study Sweden, remember only 10mil population so scale it to match, there doing very little, we'll see if much different, my bet is, not much different.
We basically have a team (Folkhälsomyndigheten FHM, National Health Service or similar) of experts setting the strategy and the government just initiating/signing off on measures recommended by this team. They're basing it on international research and some simulations they did on how various measures impact epidemic growth rates in Sweden. Basically, it is accepted that over half the population or more will eventually get the virus, but the growth rate is to be kept under control so that everyone gets proper medical care by avoiding overfull hospitals as far as possible. Additionally, the intent is to preserve/avoid interrupting economy as much as possible.
In other words, there's some thought behind this. Whether this works out remains to be seen...
To be balanced and to shit talk my country: Aspects of Swedish preparation have been severely lacking. We have a decentralized (regional) layer of healthcare that is responsible for stockpiling medical supplies, which they have completely failed to do for emergencies (in fact it has been breaking down during normal circumstances). The military was basically decommissioned in the 90s-00s (only being rebuilt latest years) so comparatively little assistance from military healthcare. etc. May well happen that we get unnecessarily high death numbers for these reasons regardless of anything the FHM/NHS does now.
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