April 17, 2020
By Paul Carrel
BERLIN (Reuters) – The coronavirus outbreak in Germany has become
manageable again as the number of patients who have recovered has been
higher than the number of new infections every day this week, the health
minister said on Friday.
Germany has the fifth highest COVID-19 caseload behind the United
States, Spain, Italy and France at nearly 134,000 but has kept
fatalities down to a relatively low 3,868 thanks to early and extensive
testing.
“The outbreak has – as of today – become controllable and manageable
again,” Health Minister Jens Spahn told a news conference, adding that
the health care system had “at no time been overwhelmed so far”.
Lothar Wieler, president of the Robert Koch Institute, said the virus
reproduction or transmission rate in Germany had dropped below 1 –
meaning one person with the virus infects fewer than one other on
average.
“We see now that for the first time we are below 1. We will see
whether that remains stable…There can be new infections any time,”
Wieler said, stressing that too much emphasis should not be put on the
transmission rate numbers.
“We have withstood a first wave very well, achieved through a joint
effort by society, but that can change any time,” he told the news
conference.
Underlining the authorities’ caution about the virus outbreak,
Finance Minister Olaf Scholz said: “We must develop a new normality that
will accompany us for many months, and probably into next year.”
Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Wednesday Germany would take small
steps out of lockdown with the partial reopening of shops next week and
schools from May 4.
The president of the Paul Ehrlich Institute, a research and medical
regulatory body, told the news conference with Spahn that clinical
testing of a vaccine would start soon in Germany. Four trials were
already underway elsewhere, he added.
TRACING APP
A coronavirus contact tracing app would be ready for Germans to
download and use on their smartphones in three to four weeks, Spahn
said.
German federal and state government leaders said on Wednesday they
would support voluntary use of such an app, when available, so people
can quickly learn when they have had been exposed to an infected person.
Developers are working hard on the app, which will use bluetooth
technology, to make sure data protection standards are “as perfect as
possible”, Spahn said.
“For it to be really good, it needs more like three to four weeks rather than two weeks,” he added.
Sources familiar with the matter say that the Robert Koch Institute’s
contact tracing app is already ready and being tested, but its launch
would be coordinated with Germany’s moves to ease restrictions on
movement.
The app would run on top of a technology platform, called
Pan-European Privacy-Preserving Proximity Tracing (PEPP), that is
supporting similar app initiatives in other European countries including
Italy.
The German authorities have been more cautious than some Asian
countries in using digital technology to fight the coronavirus,
restrained by Europe’s strict data privacy laws and mindful of public
scepticism towards any surveillance reminiscent of Nazi- or
communist-era rule.
https://www.oann.com/virus-tracing-app-ready-for-germany-rollout-in-three-four-weeks-minister/