«In many rich countries covid-19 has slashed life expectancy to below 2015 levels». The Economist. 29. september 2021. ISSN0013-0613. Besøkt 5. oktober 2021. «Researchers in Britain, Denmark and Germany found that between 2019 and 2020 life expectancy at birth dropped in all but two of the 28 countries studied. Only in Denmark and Norway, and for women in Finland, did it rise. America, which has reported the world’s highest covid-19 death toll, fared worst, with male life expectancy at birth falling by more than two years.»
Orange, Richard (30. mai 2020). «Coronavirus: Norway wonders if it should have been more like Sweden». The Telegraph (på engelsk). ISSN0307-1235. Besøkt 1. juni 2020. «No one doubts Norway's success in bringing the pandemic under control. On Friday, there were just 30 people in hospital with coronavirus and five on a ventilator. Only one person had died all week. The per capita death toll is now 44 per million people, just over a tenth of that seen in neighbouring Sweden, where 4,971 people have died. But this success has come at a prohibitive social and economic cost.»
«In many rich countries covid-19 has slashed life expectancy to below 2015 levels». The Economist. 29. september 2021. ISSN0013-0613. Besøkt 5. oktober 2021. «Researchers in Britain, Denmark and Germany found that between 2019 and 2020 life expectancy at birth dropped in all but two of the 28 countries studied. Only in Denmark and Norway, and for women in Finland, did it rise. America, which has reported the world’s highest covid-19 death toll, fared worst, with male life expectancy at birth falling by more than two years.»
Orange, Richard (30. mai 2020). «Coronavirus: Norway wonders if it should have been more like Sweden». The Telegraph (på engelsk). ISSN0307-1235. Besøkt 1. juni 2020. «No one doubts Norway's success in bringing the pandemic under control. On Friday, there were just 30 people in hospital with coronavirus and five on a ventilator. Only one person had died all week. The per capita death toll is now 44 per million people, just over a tenth of that seen in neighbouring Sweden, where 4,971 people have died. But this success has come at a prohibitive social and economic cost.»