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HEALTH

VERDICT: How well did Norway handle the Covid-19 pandemic?

Norway’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic was given an overall positive scorecard in an official commission report published on Tuesday.

covid vaccination
An unrelated illustration photo of Covid-19 vaccination. Norway's Corona Commission has released its final report on the country's response to Covid-19. Photo: Claus Bech / Ritzau Scanpix / AFP

The Corona Commission, appointed to scrutinise the response of authorities and health services, on Tuesday published its final report on the country’s management of the pandemic.

The commission concluded that Norway’s response to the pandemic was generally good. The report notes that the Scandinavian country has one of the lowest Covid-19 death rates in Europe and limited the impact of the virus on economic activity.

Several individuals made far greater contributions than could have been expected, it also said.

“In the health service, state administration, municipalities and at several companies, an impressive flexibility and ability to adapt was demonstrated,” the report states.

Some criticism is included in the report. Authorities were not adequately prepared to deal with a pandemic of the magnitude Covid-19 proved to be.

The pandemic caused severe strain on a number of ICU wards at times and doctors’ services in local municipalities were poorly equipped, the report said.

“ICU preparedness at hospitals was not good enough,” the report states.

The commission meanwhile pointed out the vaccination programme as a successful element of the response but said the government should have been quicker to take the step of distributing more vaccines to areas with higher Covid-19 prevalence.

A broad range of areas are covered by the report, including its consequences for children and young people, which were found to be excessive.

Authorities failed to do enough to protect children from some of the effects of restrictions, despite this being a government objective.

“To put it a little simply, we can say that children and young people are worse affected by restrictions than by infections and that there is a difference between what you miss out on over a year when you are 16 compared to when you are 46,” the report states.

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HEALTH

Norwegian convenience stores to phase out sales of cigarettes 

Two of Norway’s most well-known convenience store chains, Narvesen and 7-Eleven, will stub out the sale of cigarettes in the long term. 

Norwegian convenience stores to phase out sales of cigarettes 

Reitan Convenience Norway, the company that owns the two chains, is set to phase out cigarette sales and ultimately stop selling them, business news publication E24 reports. 

“We already see a declining demand for cigarettes and want to contribute to phasing this out in the long term,” Anniken Staubo at Reitan Convenience Norway told the paper. 

The announcement came after sister company Reitan Convenience Sweden said that it would also stop selling cigarettes. The Norwegian arm of the business said cigarette sales would be phased out by 2026. 

“Just like Reitan Convenience Sweden, we are also not going to take in new products and brands in this category from 2026,” Staubo said. 

Staubo added that the vision to phase out cigarettes was part of the company’s overall sustainability strategy. 

“There are major environmental and social sustainability challenges in the production of tobacco. We plan for a gradual phasing out of cigarettes in our range and follow the development of any new changes in rules and laws,” Staubo said. 

The UK and New Zealand have both spoken of introducing laws to ban young people from buying tobacco.

Norgesgruppen, which owns Norway’s other prominent convenience store chain, Joker, has said it had no concrete plans to phase out the sale of cigarettes.

Since 2017, the number of young people who smoke daily in Norway has fallen, while there has been a steady increase in the number of people using snus. 

Figures from the national data agency, Statistics Norway, show that in 2023 the proportion of people who used snus daily was 16 percent, compared to just 7 percent of people aged between 16 and 74 who smoked cigarettes every day. 

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