Norway implemented a lock-down on March 12th, 12 days BEFORE it's tenth death from the virus.
Most European countries did not implement a lock-down until at least ten deaths had occurred. In the UK, our tenth death was recorded on 14 March and we did not impmement a lock down until ten days later, on 24 March.
In addition, Norway has tested 101, 986 people for the virus - or 18,996 tests per million people compared to the UK's 2,250 tests per million.
Norway now says it has R0 down to 0.7, meaning that on average, a carrier infects less than one other person and that things appear to be "under control".
Looks like a success story. Seems to back up the WHO advice that testing, tracing and early action is key. Seems to go against doing nothing for weeks and pretending it's a strategy.
Obviously Norway's smaller population and wealth is useful but, in hindsight, we probably should have taken proper measures sooner. Let's hope our situation improves soon.