Sweden's Prime Minister Stefan Lofven rejected criticism of the country's COVID-19 strategy, amid accusations that the softer lockdown his government chose has resulted in one of the world's highest mortality rates.
"We've followed the same main strategy as others," Lofven said in an interview on state broadcaster SVT on Sunday evening. "Which in other words means keeping the contagion at levels that the health care system can handle."
Lofven said that "it's too early to draw any definitive conclusions about the success of our strategy," despite the high death rate. The number of COVID-related deaths now totals 4,874 in Sweden, dwarfing the 597 registered in neighboring Denmark and 242 in Norway.
Rather, Sweden's excess mortality rate "is normal for the time year," according to Lofven. He also said methods for tracking COVID mortality rates vary between countries.
The comments follow a week of mounting criticism leveled against Lofven, after the epidemiologist he entrusted with Sweden's COVID-19 response acknowledged he'd made mistakes. The development left many bewildered, and a key poll suggested Swedes are losing faith in their country's efforts to fight the coronavirus.
Jimmie Akesson, leader of the populist Sweden Democrats, last week went as far as to compare the country's high death rates to a "massacre," in an interview with the Aftonbladet newspaper. Even so, a separate poll showed that Lofven's Social Democrats remain the most popular party among voters.
Rather than a failure of strategy, Lofven said increased testing has led to a spike in reported infection rates. "But if you look at people in hospitals with COVID, the number is diminishing, as is the number of deaths," he said.