COVID-19 has dropped life expectancy in Sweden by the biggest amount since 1944, as a top official warns there is 'no signs' of herd immunity

Stockholm
People stroll at the Drottninggatan shopping street in central Stockholm on November 10, 2020. Sweden is yet to implement a national lockdown amid the pandemic.
  • This year, Swedish life expectancy is set to fall by 0.3 years for women and 0.5 years for men.
  • This would be the biggest drop in life expectancy in Sweden since 1944.
  • The expected drop is largely down to the COVID-19 pandemic, Statistics Sweden said. The country is in the midst of a second wave, and cases are soaring.
  • "Life expectancy has increased steadily in Sweden between 1900 and 2019," the agency said. "The fact that it is sinking stands out."
  • On November 16, Sweden's prime minister announced stricter coronavirus measures after the country admitted its herd-immunity plan wasn't working.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Life expectancy in Sweden will probably fall in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the country's statistics agency said Wednesday.

The agency's predicted fall would mark the biggest year-on-year drop since 1944, Örjan Hemström, demographer at Statistics Sweden, said.

The life expectancy for women is set to fall from 84.7 to 84.4 years.

For men, it is expected to drop from 81.3 to 80.8 years, which roughly offsets the large increase in life expectancy recorded in 2019.

Sweden has taken a more relaxed approach to the pandemic by refusing to impose a national lockdown and instead adopting voluntary social distancing.

But the country is now in the midst of a second wave with soaring COVID-19 cases, and has admitted that it was wrong to expect its no-lockdown policy would prevent another surge.

On Tuesday, the country's top epidemiologist, Anders Tegnell, said: "We see no signs of immunity in the population that are slowing down the infection right now," per Bloomberg.

Statistics Sweden said that life expectancy had "increased steadily" between 1900 and 2019. "The fact that it is sinking stands out."

Its calculations were based on the Scandinavian country's death rate between January and August. During this time period, the country recorded almost 6,500 more deaths than at the same time in 2019, an increase of around 10%.

Life expectancy could fall at an even higher rate than predicted, Statistics Sweden warned, because it predicted the death rate between September and December based on the number of deaths in the corresponding months of 2019.

This year, because of COVID-19, that death rate is expected to be significantly higher.

Life expectancy will fall at different rates in different counties, the agency said – and in some areas, people could even be expected to live longer. Stockholm County, which is home to the country's capital, is expected to have the steepest drop in life expectancy of 1.2 years, data from Statistics Sweden showed.

Read more: Drugmakers behind 3 coronavirus vaccines say they work. Here's everything we know about the race for a vaccine and when you might be able to get a shot.

On November 16, Prime Minister Stefan Lofven announced stricter coronavirus measures, including restricting public gatherings to eight people.

But he echoed that the Swedish government "does not believe in a total lockdown."

Sweden has double the population of neighboring Norway, but it has recorded roughly 20 times more coronavirus-related deaths, according to data from the World Health Organization (WHO).

On November 15, Sweden reported a record 6,737 new positive cases.

The UK has the Europe's highest number of deaths linked to COVID-19, at just over 55,000 as of November 25, according to the WHO.

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