Recently it was revealed that Karolinska, Stockholms biggest hospital, were given directives to deprioritize anyone over 80 from ICU treatment, along with anyone 60+ with multiple conditions.

In the county of Västernorrland, 15 people recently died of corona - 10 of which never made it to the hospital. They were denied available ICU units, as staff has been instructed not to “waste” these on elderly patients deemed hopeless cases. Note however that Sweden has an exceptionally liberal definition of “hopeless”.

Numerous doctors in Stockholm testify to state radio P3 Nyheter, saying that patients who could’ve had good chances of surviving otherwise, are being denied intensive care units. Even if a unit is available, staff will generously count on someone needing it next, to which many are simply left with morphine and oxygen gas, doctors testified.

When medical officer Hans Boman is interviewed by state media SVT, he says it’s “more rule than exception” to let old patients die in elderly homes. Where they may or may not be given oxygen.

92-year old Eva Alinder passed away in torment at her elderly home, where she was denied basic care. Eva’s daughter told Expressen:

“She slowly choked to death in front of our eyes. The staff refused to send mom to the hospital because she was “too old”. They let her be tortured to death without oxygen all night, so many hours, without even being allowed to visit a hospital. She worked all her life, paid taxes, and this was the thanks she got.“

According to daughter Catharina Alinder, the only help staff offered Eva was a paracetamol, and crack opening the window. This while Eva’s oxygen levels were down to just 60 percent. Catharina continues saying:

-”It was horrible for me and my sister having to see mom suffer so much during her last 24 hours in life.”

After all this, the mother didn’t even qualify as a corona death in Swedish statistics, as she “technically” wasn’t tested at the hospital:

– “There has to be a huge dark number of deaths, from people dying at elderly homes without being tested. My mother isn’t part of the statistics. I’m sure she’s not the only one.”

Time Magazine recently wrote a highly critical article of Sweden, stating:

“A head doctor at a major hospital in Sweden says the current approach will “probably end in a historical massacre.” He says healthcare workers at his hospital who have tested positive for the virus but are asymptomatic have been advised to continue working. He asked to remain anonymous because “it is frowned upon to speak of the epidemic or to go against the official vision” but said he felt a need to speak out from an “ethical and medical point of view.”

Currently, Sweden is not even following basic World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines. Such as contact tracing where possible and strict measures of self-isolation.

This has caused mixed reactions on social media, where some Swedish citizens protest strongly against what they describe as state senicide policy: