FelicityR, on 2020-April-08, 04:12, said:
Most of the population live in cities. The distances between the cities make it, indeed, easier to prevent spread from one city to another, but since most cities have outbreaks it is mostly about preventing transmission within cities.
But maybe one could say that the low population pressure makes it relatively easy to get New Zealanders to accept social distancing. Even if city dwellers are not used to do big shopping once a week, many have relatives who do or used to do. Some are used to working online. Most don't use public transit. We don't have Covid breeding places comparable to the London tube.
NZ has relatively strong community spirit compared to other Western countries.
NZ sends every care worker who has had contact with a COVID case home for two weeks. Maybe NHS can't afford to do the same?
On the other hand, NZ doesn't have a good safety net. Hundreds of thousands of people can't afford the lockdown. Not to mention all the homeless.
NZ has a PM who takes Covid seriously, and who is generally respected.
Given those factors, UK probably couldn't have kept the death rate to 1 in 5 million like NZ. But they could have done a lot better.