'IT'S OVER': Sweden scraps Covid rules, Britain to end isolation early

Authorities in Sweden, Poland and the United Kingdom have announced major easings of coronavirus restrictions as the global number of infections since the start of the pandemic surpassed 400 million.

Sweden scrapped almost all of its few remaining restrictions overnight and stopped most testing for Covid-19.

Sweden's government announced last week it would scrap the remaining restrictions – effectively declaring the pandemic over – as vaccines and the less severe Omicron variant have cushioned severe cases and deaths.

"As we know this pandemic, I would say it's over," Minister of Health Lena Hallengren told national newspaper Dagens Nyheter.

Lena Hallengren pictured
Lena Hallengren says the pandemic is no longer a 'danger to society'. Source: Getty

"It's not over, but as we know it in terms of quick changes and restrictions, it is," she said, adding that Covid-19 would no longer be classified as a danger to society.

Bars and restaurants will now allowed to stay open after 11pm again and with no limits on the number of guests.

The country has halted wide-scale testing for Covid-19 even among people showing symptoms of an infection, putting an end to the mobile city-square tent sites, drive-in swab centres and home-delivered tests that became ubiquitous during the pandemic and provided essential data for tracking its spread.

The move puts Sweden at odds with most of Europe but some experts say it could become the norm as costly testing yields fewer benefits and as governments begin to consider treating Covid-19 like they do other endemic illnesses.

"We have reached a point where the cost and relevance of the testing is no longer justifiable," Swedish Public Health Agency chief Karin Tegmark Wisell said this week.

Only healthcare and elderly care workers and the most vulnerable will be entitled to free PCR testing if they are symptomatic while the rest of the population will simply be asked to stay home if they show symptoms that could be Covid-19.

UK pushes towards normal life

In the UK, instead of dropping all testing requirements, authorities are relying on testing in addition to vaccination to help enable people to return to normal life.

The government has also made rapid tests freely available and encouraged people to test themselves before potentially risky gatherings, hoping that knowing their status will curb Covid-19 transmission.

Britains will no longer be forced into isolation after testing positive for Covid.
From next month, Britains will no longer be forced into isolation after testing positive for Covid. Source: Getty

On Wednesday (local time), British Prime Minister Boris Johnson signalled his intention to remove the need to isolate after a positive Covid-19 test at the end of February.

"Provided the current encouraging trends in the data continue, it is my expectation that we will be able to end the last domestic restrictions - including the legal requirement to self-isolate if you test positive - a full month early," he said in parliament.

People would still be advised to self-isolate, but there will no longer be a mandate, which could be scrapped as early as February 21.

Both the United Kingdom and Sweden have been hit hard by the pandemic, with Sweden recording 1,579 deaths per million people and the UK faring much worse at 2,366 deaths per million people. Comparatively, Australia has recorded 172 deaths per million during the pandemic.

Poland sees 'beginning of the end'

Meanwhile, the Polish health minister said overnight that an end to the Covid-19 pandemic was in sight as he announced a cut to the isolation period for infected people and looser quarantine rules.

Poland registered record daily case numbers as recently as two weeks ago but with infections falling and the effects of Omicron appearing to be milder than previous variants, authorities believe the time is right for a lighter touch.

"We are dealing with the beginning of the end of the pandemic," Adam Niedzielski told a news conference.

Poland's health minister pictured.
'We are dealing with the beginning of the end of the pandemic,' Poland's health minister told his country. Source: Getty

"In February, declines in infections should be relatively large."

Mr Niedzielski said Poland may lift its Covid-19 restrictions in March if daily infection numbers kept falling at the current rate.

WHO warns virus 'will continue to evolve'

Global Covid-19 cases surpassed 400 million overnight, according to a Reuters tally.

But World Health Organisation chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus cautioned that "diseases know no borders" and the Omicron variant has shown that "any feeling of safety can change in a moment".

The WHO's weekly epidemiological report showed that case counts fell 17 per cent worldwide over the last week, including a 50 per cent decline in the US, while deaths globally declined 7 per cent.

"Depending on where you live, it might feel like the Covid-19 pandemic is almost over, or, it might feel like it is at its worst," Tedros said.

"But wherever you live, Covid isn't finished with us."

"We know this virus will continue to evolve, but we are not defenceless," he added. "We have the tools to prevent this disease, test for it and to treat it."

Reuters

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