SAWT BEIRUT INTERNATIONAL

| 28 March 2024, Thursday |

Germans, Austrians line up for vaccines as cases jump

Figures released on Wednesday reveal that Germans and Austrians are hurrying to get vaccinated against the coronavirus as infections climb and governments put restrictions on the unvaccinated.

Germany and Austria have some of the lowest vaccination rates in Western Europe and are now at the focus of a new wave of the pandemic as winter grips the continent.

According to the German health ministry, 436,000 people were immunized on Tuesday, including 300,000 boosters, the largest number in nearly three months. Queues have formed at vaccination clinics across the country.

“It is a sign that many citizens have recognized the need,”

government spokesperson Steffen Seibert said. But he added that the vaccination rate was still not high enough.

About 65% of Austria’s population is fully vaccinated against the virus and about 68% of Germany’s, well behind countries like Italy and Spain that were much harder hit in the early waves of the pandemic.

Sabine Dittmar, health expert for Germany’s Social Democrats, said she hoped 1.4 million people could be vaccinated a day if shots are administered at companies, by family doctors and by mobile vaccine teams, as well as at vaccination centers.

In Austria, the number of vaccines administered daily has jumped to about 73,000 in the last week, from around 20,000 in October, official data showed, although the vast majority of those were boosters rather than first shots.

Austria has ordered a lockdown on the roughly two million people who are not fully vaccinated. It has one of the highest infection rates on the continent, with a seven-day incidence of 925 per 100,000 people, compared with 320 in Germany. Its total death toll from the pandemic stands at 11,848

Neighboring Switzerland, which has not imposed restrictions on the unvaccinated, has had less success with a new vaccination drive – it only persuaded 35,000 to get their first shot in the last week.

Parts of Germany – including the capital Berlin – are demanding proof of vaccination or recent recovery from COVID-19 for all indoor leisure activities, a restriction that could be extended nationally at a meeting of officials on Thursday.

Germany also plans to force people using public transport or attending workplaces to provide a negative COVID-19 test, or proof of recovery or vaccination.

Germany’s coronavirus situation is dramatic, Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Wednesday.

Germany reported 52,826 new infections on Wednesday – a jump of a third compared with a week ago and another daily record, while 294 people died, bringing the total death toll to 98,274.

“It is not too late to opt for a first vaccine shot,” Merkel told a congress of German city mayors. “Everyone who gets vaccinated protects himself and others. And if enough people get vaccinated that is the way out of the pandemic.”

    Source:
  • Reuters