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EXPLAINED: Where Covid infections are rising rapidly in Germany

EXPLAINED: Where Covid infections are rising rapidly in Germany
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Germany Plans to Introduce Mandatory Vaccinations as COVID-19 Infections Surge

Germany has seen a dramatic surge in the number of COVID-19 cases in the country. In the past two weeks, the number of new infections in the country has

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COVID: Germany faces ′national emergency′ | News | DW

A fourth wave of COVID infections has seen case numbers reach record levels in Germany. The health minister has said a lockdown "can't be ruled out."

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Uniform Coronavirus Rules: The Failure of Germany's Coronavirus Strategy


DER SPIEGEL
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Disagreement and Dithering
The Failure of Germany's Coronavirus Strategy
Chancellor Angela Merkel is pushing for legal changes that would give the federal government more powers to stop the spread of the coronavirus. But the states are pushing pack.
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In normal times, this empty street in Hamburg's St. Pauli district would be filled with revelers.
Foto: Hanno Bode / imago images
Sascha Raabe, a Social Democratic (SPD) member of German parliament from the state of Hesse, knows what it’s like to have COVID-19. He caught the disease last fall and says it "really knocked him out” for six days. After three months, he still can’t taste properly and his sense of smell isn't back yet either, he says. Raabe is not one to minimize the dangers of the virus.

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Hospitals in Germany reach crisis point


Hospitals in Germany reach crisis point
Despite urgent warnings from doctors and scientists, the federal and state governments are sticking to their policy of opening up the economy and are refusing to take urgently needed measures, such as the immediate closure of schools and businesses. The result is a dramatic situation in Germany’s hospitals, where, within a very short time, the care of seriously ill patients will no longer be guaranteed.
The seven-day incidence rate is currently 134.2 infections per 100,000 people per day—and rising. On April 1, almost 22,700 new infections occurred. With 232 deaths, almost 50 more people died than a week earlier. One reason for the steady increase in infections is the spread of the much more infectious and aggressive B.1.1.7 strain, which now causes almost 90 percent of infections in Germany and thus contributes to the increase in severe illness.

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COVID: Why some doctors and nurses hesitate to get vaccinated | Germany| News and in-depth reporting from Berlin and beyond | DW


COVID: Why some doctors and nurses hesitate to get vaccinated
The coronavirus vaccine is seen as the only way to combat the pandemic. Medical and nursing staff are at high risk of contracting and spreading the disease. So why do many of them in Germany not want to get vaccinated?
Many German doctors and nurses are wary of the new COVID vaccines
Berlin's Bethel Hospital in the tranquil south of the capital is a rather small institution, far removed from the hustle and bustle of large clinics. But of course, the coronavirus pandemic has changed all that. 
A once-vacant ward has been converted for vaccinations. But what is still missing is the vaccine itself, as with so many other locations in Germany. That is somewhat frustrating, says senior physician and pandemic officer Hans Weigeldt. After all, he says, the vaccine is required to offer a glimmer of hope after months of hard work, to lift the spirits of health workers. 

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