From the BBC:
“Coronavirus:
What Europeans have learned from a year of pandemic”
From the first
case diagnosed a year ago at a hospital in northern Italy to the empty shops,
restaurants and stadiums of Europe's cities, the lives of Europeans have been
changed forever. Curbs on movement have forced every country and society to
adapt its rules and rethink its culture. There have been hard truths and
unexpected innovations in a year that changed Europe.
Restrictions
are tough for societies used to freedom
Spain's
lockdown was among the harshest in Europe, says Nekane Balluerka Lasa,
professor of behavioural sciences methodology at the University of the Basque
Country. Isolation was particularly hard for older people and lower-income
families, especially if there was no nuclear unit. Spaniards are used to social
interaction. Infections came down, but the economic cost was very high and the
main lesson was the impact on people's mental health. Maybe that explains why
it wasn't possible to keep it going. Our study found that 46% of people felt
grave psychological distress.
Italians
were initially frightened into uncharacteristic obedience, says BBC Rome
correspondent Mark Lowen. They were the first to be crushed by the virus, the
first to see intensive care units close to collapse, and friends and family
dying. Very widespread respect for restrictions began to change with the second
wave, with some protests against renewed lockdowns, given the fear and fatigue.
The Dutch didn't
have a lockdown until December, but when a curfew was imposed in January, riots
broke out, says BBC Hague correspondent Anna Holligan. Tensions had been
festering. The unrest exposed an undercurrent of resentment across generations
and came after a childcare allowance scandal had brought down the government.
Most accepted the lockdown, but those already frustrated felt emboldened after
the government had broken its own rules.
Germany's
initial strategy was to test widely and then track and interrupt chains of
infection, says BBC Berlin correspondent Jenny Hill. It worked until cases
spiralled last autumn. The vast majority of Germans support lockdown measures,
surveys suggest. But there has been furious resistance from some, who have
protested, usually without masks or social distancing. Some are simply
concerned by the impact of lockdown restrictions, but the protests tend to
bring together conspiracy theorists, anti-vaxxers and far-right activists.
Slovenia has
endured some of the tightest restrictions in Europe, and yet it has one of the
world's highest death rates, says BBC Balkans correspondent Guy Delauney.
Internal travel was banned from October until mid-February, most shops were
shut and schools went online. Epidemiologists are baffled, but people here
suspect that private socialising continued despite the emergency measures.
Sweden
avoided a lockdown and built its strategy largely around voluntary social
distancing guidelines, says BBC reporter Maddy Savage in Stockholm. The public
largely complied at the start but, as cases spiked during the second wave,
compliance got slacker. Tighter guidelines came in on alcohol sales and
customers in bars and restaurants. But it wasn't until the turn of the year
that a new pandemic law gave ministers greater powers to limit numbers in shops
and on long-distance trains and buses.
Experts are
essential, but mistakes have been made
The pandemic
inspired a new-found, national respect for German scientists, says the BBC's
Jenny Hill. Virologist Christian Drosten is now a household name, as is Lothar
Wieler, who runs the Robert Koch Institute that advises the German government.
So are the married BioNTech founders Uğur Şahin and Özlem Türeci, who developed
the first approved vaccine. Chancellor Angela Merkel, who studied quantum
chemistry herself, is heavily influenced by the opinion of Germany's scientific
community which, in the main, urges restrictions and caution. But the response
to the pandemic has increasingly been characterised by squabbles among regional
leaders, some of whom demand fewer restrictions on daily life.
Sweden's
state epidemiologist Anders Tegnell has largely been the public face of the
country's response to the pandemic, says Maddy Savage in Stockholm. Previously
a low-profile bureaucrat, he quickly became a well-known and polarising figure
both at home and abroad. Early on in the pandemic polls suggested 75% of the
population backed the public health response. But that dropped to 50% as cases
rose and tougher restrictions came in. His face appeared on T-shirts, while
critics sent his family death threats.
Internationally,
scientific advisers were called in but no-one thought to ask the experts on old
age, says Ingmar Skoog, head of the Centre of Ageing and Health in Sweden. Half
of all deaths in Sweden's first wave were in care institutions and another quarter
had home care. It's very difficult to stop the virus coming into care homes as
most people need a lot of help, but we didn't have enough protective gear. Most
often it's not relatives who bring the virus into care homes; for six months we
had a no-visit rule. So you had an 83-year-old man not allowed to visit his
wife of 60 years. It's been suggested that may have been illegal.
Italy has
picked experts for key jobs in the new government, says Mark Lowen in Rome.
Initially ex-Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte had very high approval ratings, but
old political divisions surfaced over how to manage the second lockdown and
rebuild the economy. He fell and now technocrat Mario Draghi, ex-head of the
European Central Bank, is in charge with experts running finance and education
and a new ministry for ecological transition. There's a feeling opportunities
to transform Italy had to be given to figures transcending political divisions.
While Serbia
has had spectacular success with its vaccination programme, neighbouring Bosnia
has suffered, says Guy Delauney. Bosnia has no strong, centralised leadership
and tackling coronavirus has largely fallen to the two semi-autonomous regions,
which have not covered themselves in glory. The prime minister of the
Federation entity, Fadil Novalic, is due to stand trial over the award of a
contract to procure ventilators to a fruit-processing company. And Bosnian
health workers are more likely to get vaccinated in Serbia, where border
centres have offered them a jab.
The EU
wasn't set up for a pan-European health crisis The European Union was not
well prepared, although it's far from unique in that, says BBC Europe
correspondent Kevin Connolly. It did what it could to co-ordinate action - by
creating "green lanes" at closed or crowded borders, to facilitate
the flow of medical supplies. But it couldn't do much about the way individual
states competed for PPE. Rich countries like France did much better than poorer
ones like Bulgaria.
What's the
problem with the EU's vaccine programme? There was local co-operation when
health systems were overwhelmed: patients were moved over the French border to
hospitals in Germany; and recently Portugal received help from Germany and
Austria. But it's perfectly possible such aid could have happened if the EU had
not existed. The European Commission's really important attempt to ensure its
own centrality in European life has been to take over the vaccine procurement
programme from EU member states. This is a field in which it has no experience
and it has not, so far, done well. A failure on vaccine procurement and rollout
would create a major political problem.
Societies
have responded in different ways
Hungary's
birthrate has fallen, says BBC Budapest correspondent Nick Thorpe. Three
thousand more babies were born in 2020 than in 2019, largely because of the
conservative Fidesz government's generous tax incentives to couples to have
more babies. But birth numbers began to fall in November and then fell further
in December and January - the first months when a Covid impact could be
registered. Government supporters draw comfort from the fact that the marriage
rate continues to rise and abortion rates have plunged.
Spanish women
have had it tougher, says Prof Nekane Balluerka Lasa. Several studies have
shown that in families where both men and women work outside the home, women
spend much more time caring for dependent elderly people and for their
children. This may explain why the psychological discomfort of women during the
pandemic was greater than that of men.
Ageism in
Sweden has increased, says Prof Ingmar Skoog. There are 1.5m people in
Sweden over 70 and the authorities went out and said they couldn't take care of
themselves. But older people are completely different from 30 or 40 years ago:
we talk about 70 as the new 50. Those who did not have carers only accounted
for 10% of deaths.
Italy's
long-entrenched brain drain has partially reversed, says Mark Lowen. More than
five million Italians live abroad, up by more than 75% in the past 15 years,
with the largest rises among high school and university graduates. While
successive governments have tried to tempt them back, it's the pandemic that
seems to have had a bigger impact in persuading Italians to return, to be with
their families. The challenge now will be to keep them here.
A Europe
without borders is fine in theory
Kevin
Connolly, Brussels: The concept of open borders is deeply ingrained in the
theology of the European Union: the idea that a journey from Paris to Gdansk
should be little different from a trip to Grenoble. But open borders don't work
during pandemics. There was alarm in Brussels when some member states closed
borders at the start of the pandemic, and then again when Germany imposed
border controls with the Czech Republic and part of Austria this month. But
business and leisure travel have fallen so much that the issue has not mattered
so much.
Bethany Bell,
BBC Vienna correspondent: One of the most notorious Covid outbreaks began last
year at the Austrian ski resort of Ischgl, spreading to dozens of countries
when foreign tourists went home. This year the ski slopes are open, but with
quarantines, and hotels and restaurants closed, skiing is effectively only
meant for locals. Police have fined dozens of foreign skiers who dodged the
rules.
Imogen
Foulkes, BBC Bern correspondent: Switzerland's alpine communities are also
heavily dependent on winter tourism and the government has taken the controversial
decision to keep the ski slopes open. Après ski parties are a distant memory,
with restaurants and bars closed and lifts at reduced capacity. Economic damage
is immense, but initial data suggests Switzerland's strategy may not be as
risky as some critics claimed. Increased testing at resorts meant that
outbreaks in Wengen and St Moritz were found and contained quickly.
Maddy Savage,
Stockholm: Swedish ski resorts are open too, but skiers have been asked to stay
one ski-pole apart and avoid socialising outside their group. So the après ski
scene is toned-down, with no alcohol sales after 20:00 and no live bands
belting out Abba or Avicii songs. But travel here for non-Swedes has become
harder, with negative tests required for the first time this month,.
Guy
Delauney, Ljubljana: Slovenians own more than 100,000 properties in
neighbouring Croatia, so the offer of a €200 (£170) voucher last summer had
little effect on domestic tourism. With no "firebreak" between the
end of the summer holidays and the start of term, the suspicion is that
students may have acted as vectors for transmission ahead of October's
lockdown.
Hard truths
about how we slaughter animals Millions of mink were culled in Denmark when
Covid-19 spread to mink farms. Carl Valentin, animal welfare spokesman for the
Socialist People's Party: We have learned a lot about what diseases like Covid
have to do with our relationship with animals. Everyone was talking about Wuhan
and wet markets, but many Danes didn't know we had the world's biggest mink
population. It's now been made illegal to farm mink this year and we'll never
have a mink industry in that way again in Denmark. Outbreaks among hundreds of
workers at German meat processing plants, such as at Tönnies in Gütersloh last
June, shocked Germans and led to a change in the law, says Jenny Hill.
Scientists thought the workers were more vulnerable because of cool
temperatures in slaughterhouses and loud machinery that forced them to shout.
But there were stories of long hours, minimum wages and overcrowded
accommodation for workers, mainly from Eastern Europe and employed by
sub-contractors. From April, meat-processing plants will be largely banned from
employing temporary workers.
Europeans
embraced lifestyle change in different ways
France
finally goes digital, by Lucy Williamson, BBC Paris correspondent. Until the
second lockdown last autumn, life in France often evoked an age of typewriters
and triplicate. Despite an annual turnover of almost €2.4tn (£2.1tn; $2.9tn),
two-thirds of small businesses didn't operate online, and the websites of even
vast iconic department stores like Galeries Lafayette or BHV offered little
more than an address and opening hours, plus an image or two of some fancy
shoes. Now, everything from cafe meals to tax payments and residency card
applications can be made online and the department stores have slick websites.
Boosting the digital economy has been a key goal for President Emmanuel Macron;
the pandemic a strange ally in pushing France online.
Spaniards are
working from home, for now, by Prof Nekane Balluerka Lasa. Spain is a very
friendly culture: we don't know any other way. While digital transformation to
"teleworking" here has been quite big, I think it'll complement
face-to-face work and won't replace it completely. University students already
spend one week at home and one week at university - and they want to come every
day.
A cashless
society? Not just yet, by Bethany Bell, BBC News Vienna: Since the pandemic
began, it's become common to see signs in Austrian supermarkets asking for
cashless payments to "protect" staff and customers. Austrians have
traditionally liked paying in cash, but a survey by the Austrian National Bank
last summer suggests the pandemic may have speeded up an already existing trend
towards cashless payments, as with the rest of Europe. But cash is still very
popular here. It's not unusual to come across cash-only cafes or shops, and
there is little sign of it going out of fashion.
^ One year
later and a lot has changed in Europe, the EU and around the world. The main
thing the 1st wave showed is that the EU is not as united as they
once thought they were. Spain and Italy were abandoned by everyone and forced
to deal with Covid by themselves. ^
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