NewsCorona bang! German neighbor withdraws Freedom Day benefits and...

Corona bang! German neighbor withdraws Freedom Day benefits and introduces 3G

Two months after the end of all Corona restrictions and a Freedom Day, Denmark is announcing new Covid rules. Before that, the number of infections had risen sharply.

Munich – Denmark was seen by many other countries as a role model and example in the coronavirus pandemic *. Germany’s Scandinavian neighbor, with around 5.8 million inhabitants, had the number of infections under control thanks to the disciplined application of the measures by the citizens and a high vaccination rate. As of November 3, around 77 percent of citizens had been vaccinated against Corona at least once – even without compulsory vaccination *. It is one of the highest vaccination rates in the world.

After Freedom Day: Denmark reintroduces corona rules

“Corona under control, now we can reap the fruits of our hard work”, Health Minister Magnus Heunicke declared on September 10, when all Corona requirements were dropped – including the mask requirement. On September 11th, the Danes celebrated a so-called Freedom Day exuberantly. But at the beginning of November, the corona infection numbers exploded again between Jutland and Copenhagen, similar to what is currently the case with our southern neighbor, Germany. And that despite the vaccination campaign.

As Denmark’s Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said on Monday evening (November 8th), the government has now followed advice from epidemiologists to reintroduce the 3G rule to contain Corona *. Covid-19 * will be re-classified as a “threat to society” on the recommendation of the committee, said the 43-year-old Frederiksen.

Denmark: New corona requirements due to increasing numbers of infections

The situation is serious: According to a report by Tagesspiegel , the SSI health institute registered 2598 new infections with the coronavirus in Denmark on Thursday (November 4), and it was the highest daily value so far for the entire year 2021. At the comparison time a year ago, around 1000 new corona cases * were registered every day.

Nevertheless, the renewed tightening of the rules comes as a surprise and sudden – not only because of Freedom Day.

In the video: Corona expert Karl Lauterbach – Carnival can become a superspreader event

“We will never go into lockdown again,” the epidemiologist Lone Simonsen recently told the news magazine Spiegel . It is now a pandemic of the unvaccinated. “It no longer poses a threat to society as a whole. We can now let it run free, even if it could cause major outbreaks locally. But these will no longer be as deadly as they were before the introduction of the vaccines, ”said Simonsen in the conversation. So now the government in Copenhagen is again speaking of a “threat to society” – and is adjusting it. (pm) * Merkur.de is an offer from IPPEN.MEDIA

To swim with sharks! This is how entrepreneurs float in the face of inflation

The most successful entrepreneur, and the one who can swim and fall in love with sharks, is the one who is willing to learn from every moment of his process, points out Luis Arandia.

#Between the lines | COVID-19. The sixth wave is coming and a (new) variant...

It is not possible to declare when the sixth wave will arrive in Mexico, but now, more than ever, it is urgent that virological surveillance be maintained, points out Jonathán Torres.

In the new reality, brands must establish messages of closeness

The diffusion of modifications to the organizational culture in the face of a new scenario will be successful if it is underpinned by transparent, close and reliable communication, considers Mario Maraboto.

Covid-19: The end of the pandemic is in sight, says the WHO

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus highlighted that last week the number of weekly deaths fell to its lowest level since March 2020.

#Between the lines | The (yet) unsolved mystery of COVID-19

Suddenly it seems that there is a battle between specialists from different medical specialties to see who announces the next misfortune, says Jonathán Torres.

More