COVID-19 panic peddlers are simply ignoring the cold, hard statistical data. In the last four months, the case death rate has dropped from 5.6%-5.8% territory down to 2.7% territory, even though we've seen a huge increase in case numbers. Common sense should tell you that this proves that cooping up hundreds of millions of people and shutting down half the economy was a needless act and a bad idea. If the lockdown approach were the best answer, the death rate should be higher than it was under the lockdown, not 50% lower.
Given the renewed attacks on any kind of herd-immunity approach to COVID-19, we should take another look at Sweden's and Taiwan's approaches. Sweden and Taiwan have allowed most of their businesses and schools to stay open. Yet, COVID-19 deaths in Sweden have dropped dramatically since June, while Taiwan has had fewer cases and deaths per capita than any other nation.
From April to June, daily COVID-19 deaths in Sweden dropped by more than 50%. Since July 24, Sweden has never had more than 6 deaths on any given day, and on many days has had 0, 1, or 2 deaths. And Sweden's COVID-19 crude death rate continues to be lower than that of several other European nations.
Critics cite Sweden's COVID-19 case death rate as evidence that Sweden's modified herd-immunity approach has not worked. But this argument ignores the fact that even though Sweden has not been under a lockdown, barely 1% of Swedes have caught the virus, and the daily number of deaths has remained very low for the last four months even during periods when the number of cases has increased substantially. And, as mentioned, Sweden's crude death rate is lower than that of several other European nations.
Furthermore, Sweden's overall COVID-19 case death rate is 5.8%. Granted, that is higher than most other nations' case death rate, but it is still very low in absolute terms. A 5.8% case death rate equals a case survival rate of 94.2%.
In addition, the vast majority of Sweden's COVID-19 deaths have occurred among the elderly and the medically ill. Sweden's one mistake in its modified herd-immunity approach was that no significant efforts were made to keep the elderly and the medically ill away from other people. If this had been done, Sweden's case death rate would be far lower than 5.8%.
When we look at Sweden's COVID-19 numbers, we should keep in mind that, thanks to Sweden's moderate approach, millions of Swedes have not lost their jobs; millions of Swedes have not seen their life savings wiped out; and thousands of Swedish businesses have not been forced to shut down. By any fair measurement, Sweden's approach has been a success.
As mentioned, Taiwan is another country that chose not to impose a lockdown, and that chose to keep most of its schools and businesses open. The results? Taiwan has had fewer than 600 cases and only 7 deaths out of a population of 24 million. Here are two articles on Taiwan's success with its very moderate approach to COVID-19:
https://www.cnbc.com/.../how-taiwan-beat-the-coronavirus...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COVID-19_pandemic_in_Taiwan