Thine language interpreters Martha Tilrum was a student and had just started in practice in Bodø when the country closed down March 12, 2020. – We did not think the corona would hit us. But in a few minutes, I and a fellow student flight tickets were lost. We asked the university, who did not know what to do. Everything was chaotic. – It gave a judgment. And that feeling lasted quite a long time. It told Srum, who is from Harstad, Sunday in Helgemorgon. The same date was the start of a digital school life for many. Including Oda Oline Omdal from Kristiansand. Oda Oline Omdal attended a secondary school under the corona. Photo: Private – I felt digital teaching never ended completely. It was a while when it was physical attendance. But we went around all the time and were afraid that it would be digital again. – There are probably some things I should have learned, which I simply did not get with me. I also think we missed a lot of social, she says. Isak Brox Krane from Tromsø was a primary school student. – I think we who went to the elementary school were affected more socially than in terms of education. It was strange that everything switched from the physical to the digital, he says. Isaac Brox Krane attended the primary school when the coronary initiative was introduced. Stock Photo Photo: Ingvild Vik Høie: Wanted more things this week this week is it five years since the government introduced restrictions that then -then Prime Minister Erna Solberg (H) call the most intrusive measures in peacetime. The infection speech then increased quickly. Nevertheless, the message came from the government as a surprise to many: The schools were closed. Several companies had to keep the doors close. Only those in socially critical jobs could go to work as usual as nothing was normal. Others were asked to stay at home office. For some, layoffs were the only solution. Several of the measures lasted for nearly three years. Five years after the shutdown, then Minister of Health Bent Høie (H) says that there are more things he would do differently. – We had too many measures over time aimed at children and young people. They could have been avoided. – But it was difficult. The government had to take many care to have confidence from the population, says Høie. The picture of the then Minister of Health who interrupted the handling between the then FHI Director and Prime Minister went viral. Photo: Lise Åserud / Lise Åserud / NTB FHI wanted to open schools earlier Camilla Stoltenberg has previously said that the closures did not need to be so powerful, whether the Public Health Institute (FHI) had been researched on various measures underway in the pandemic. – We disagree with the government about how long we needed to be strict on measures in school. Camilla Stoltenberg is currently Executive Vice President of the Research Institute Norce. Under the corona was the director of the Norwegian Institute of Public Health. Photo: news Stoltenberg says that FHI wanted to open schools and kindergartens much earlier than they became. The reason was that they saw that the virus did not affect children and young people as hard as the elderly. – We are eager for light for school and kindergartens a lot earlier. We also eager to scale measures geographically according to how infected were. NAKSTAD: Meiner several measures were unnecessary Espen Rostrup Nakstad, former assistant health director, also thinks that there were too many national measures. And then not only to the young people. He says that most people who were admitted to hospitals are held in central Austlandet. -In retrospect, we can think that all measures were not equally necessary outside the Oslo area. Maybe we need to be good at the next time to differentiate and proper efforts where it needs, he says. For many, Nakstad became a safe face on the many press conferences to the health authorities. Espen Rostrup Nakstad now works as a tenant for the CBRNE Center at the University of Oslo. Stock Photo Photo: Berit Roald / Berit Roald / NTB – We asked people to be home when they were sick. In retrospect, we can say that there was over 90 percent of the effect not to be hit by infection waves. Therefore, many of the other measures were not so necessary. Now he thinks that some measures were unnecessary. – We discussed the infection control measures outdoors a lot. They turned out not to be so important, he says. If the facet does not lead the next pandemic even if the health authorities learned a lot from the corona duck, Nakstad says that there is a limit to how precautions they are on a new pandemic. – The next pandemic will be a completely different virus. It can hit other age groups and start a completely different city in the world. Political decisions in the beginning are also important. Nakstad does not say they have any facet after the corona. – But we have to work before the crises to adapt measures such as school and other cities. Martha Tilrum here in the studio for Helgemorgon. Photo: Ismail Burak Akkan / news Martha Tilrum had to go again for a year again on the studies due to coronary measures. She therefore hopes that measures in the event of a new pandemic will not affect children and young people as hard. – It was tremendously tough, and it characterizes me, she says. How was it to be young during the pandemic? 21 -year -old Oda got a continuing way and thinks the pandemic will characterize her for the rest of her life. Published 10.03.2025, at. 07.34 Updated 10.03.2025, at. 07.38
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