It did affect us in adult education, though, as we were abruptly ordered to change everything in January to online teaching. Our heresy lectures, which would have included my Tolkien lecture, went with that weird pseudo-lockdown; we're now trying them again in October. Who knows what anything will be like then.
Since, though, we've returned to pretending there isn't a pandemic. You can see the results in the graphs below, which are from our government broadcaster. Hospitalization figures are, shall we say, alarming.
And deaths even more so.
I direct your attention to the fact that on New Year, some 1 500 people had died of Covid in Finland. On Friday 25.3. the official count was 2 985, and at this rate we may already have hit 3 000 by the time this post publishes. Sure, that's nowhere near Sweden and their 18 000 deaths; Finland has roughly half the population of Sweden, so we would still have to triple our death toll to get anywhere near out neighbors. But it's pretty sobering to think that half of Finland's Covid deaths have come in just three months in 2022. All because this fall, we decided that containing the pandemic is just too boring and unprofitable for our restaurant industry.
Judging from what I'm seeing on my Instagram, case numbers are only going to go up. It's just bizarre that we're back in a situation where nobody in authority seems to know what to do or want to do anything, and we're all out here trying to work out what kind of risks to take on our own.
1 comment:
It's similar in Canada. We've done lockdowns followed by loosening restrictions followed by another lockdown followed by loosening restrictions...
We're in the 'loosening restrictions' phase now and I'm waiting for the inevitable upswing in hospitalizations (I believe they've declared a new wave in Quebec). It seems the new variants are generally less lethal (and with greater vaccination numbers) so there'll be less dead but our ICUs will still be filling up along with the danger of hitting max capacity.
Welcome to the new normal no matter how many people would like it to go away.
Post a Comment