After two an a half years, we can now see more clearly just how effective, or, not, the various pandemic strategies were. We are please to note that the country we were rooting for the hardest, Sweden, has
come out the winner with their light touch, no-lockdown approach. That was according to their ranking in terms of all-cause percent excess deaths over the whole pandemic from 2020 through mid-2022, and they came out the best of all countries examined in the study, and yes, even better than their vaunted Nordic neighbors (even Iceland). Really.
As for Belarus, Nicaragua, Tanzania, Uruguay, and Brazil, who also eschewed lockdowns (Nicaragua even
encouraged mass gatherings), those countries were not listed, but a cursory look at their excess all-cause mortality shows that their numbers varied but were similar to or lower than their stricter neighbors. And as we
noted previously, while the USA did abysmally overall in terms of excess deaths, the 12 US states that never locked down at all generally did better overall than their stricter neighbors and the national average. And Florida, when adjusted for age, outperformed New York, New Jersey, Michigan, and even California, and was ultimately an average state overall.
DECEMBER UPDATE: Looks like now even China's ultimate lockdown failure is
yet another way Sweden (and Belarus, Nicaragua, Tanzania, South Dakota, Florida, etc.) has been vindicated.
It has been said, "you either do China, or you do Sweden (etc.), as anything in between will do more harm than good in the long run". Now, it seems that the first five words of that are no longer true, if they ever really were.
QED