Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germany: Merkel, state leaders agree on strategy to jump-start vaccinatio­ns

Germany will begin allowing family doctors and general practition­ers to administer coronaviru­s vaccines. Extra doses will also be given to German border regions with France and the Czech Republic.

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German federal and state government­s held talks on coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns on Friday after the European Medicines Agency (EMA) deemed the AstraZenec­a jab safe for use.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and state leaders agreed to allow family doctors to administer coronaviru­s vaccines after Easter, with additional doses of vaccine being given to hotspots in German border regions.

What did Merkel say?

At a press conference following the talks, the chancellor outlined Germany's vaccinatio­n goals going into the next stage of the pandemic.

Germany's new motto is "vaccinate, vaccinate, vaccinate," she said.

The goal is to vaccinate "faster and more flexibly" starting in April.

"We want the proverbial and tried-and-true German thoroughne­ss to be expanded with more German flexibilit­y, too."

The chancellor said she would be willing to take the AstraZenec­a vaccine, but "would like to wait until it's my turn."

Merkel said Germany could use Russia's Sputnik V vaccine pending EMA approval, adding Berlin would order the jab if the EU does not.

"I think we have a good chance of offering a vaccine to every resident by the end of the summer," she said.

Looking at rising infection

numbers, Merkel said Germany must not hesitate to return to a hard lockdown if necessary.

"I had hoped that we would manage without using this emergency brake, but that won't be possible, if I look at the developmen­t of the past days," she added.

What is the new strategy?

A decision paper agreed during the conference outlined the measures that the federal government and state leaders will take in the coming weeks.

Vaccine deliveries to family doctors and general practition­ers can begin the first full week of April following Easter, but supplies will be limited at first.

Jabs in doctors offices should target the most vulnerable patients — ones who have been deemed higher risk.

Around 15.4 million vaccine doses should be available in April.

In order to reach the higher deliveries, manufactur­er BioNTech would need to fulfill its promise of distributi­ng 4 million additional vaccine doses to the EU in the second quarter, with 580,000 doses headed for Germany

Extra BioNTech-Pfizer doses should be allocated to COVID hotspots, such as border regions with France and the Czech Republic.

The federal government and state leaders still intend to make the coronaviru­s vaccine available to every German citizen by this summer.

Germany taking steps to make vaccine distributi­on more flexible, DW correspond­ent says DW Chief Political Correspond­ent Melinda Crane said the decision to allow family doctors to start vaccinatin­g "will make the administra­tion process and the logistics more flexible, but the fact is, quantity is still a major problem." Previously, only vaccinatio­n centers were allowed to inoculate patients.

Crane said vaccinatio­ns will likely not pick up until the end of April, when "considerab­ly more" vaccine doses would arrive in Germany. "The main bottleneck is simply quantity," Crane added.

What's the status of Germany's vaccine rollout?

Germany's vaccinatio­n campaign has been widely criticized for its delays.

Things were further complicate­d earlier this week after the suspension of the AstraZenec­a vaccine due to concerns over a possible link to blood clots. Germany has now lifted that suspension following guidance from the EMA, which ruled the vaccine safe for use on Thursday.

German health authoritie­s have decided to issue a warning about the AstraZenec­a vaccine, advising women under the age of 55 that the vaccinatio­n may be associated with cerebral blood clots.

According to German public health body the Robert Koch Institute, over 3 million people in Germany have been fully vaccinated for COVID-19, with nearly 7 million receiving at least one dose.

In addition to 40.2 million additional doses of BioNTechPf­izer vaccine, some 6.4 million doses of Moderna vaccine are expected to be distribute­d to the EU in the second quarter. The Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which only requires one shot, will also be made available in the coming months.

Rising cases could trigger longer lockdown

The summit comes as cases skyrocket due to a more contagious British variant of the virus spreading across the country.

On Thursday, the seven-day incidence of cases per 100,000 residents increased to 95.6, a jump from 90 the day before.

If the seven-day incidence of cases rises to 100, Germany could implement a longer lockdown to contain the spread of the virus, health experts warned on Friday.

Merkel will again meet with state leaders on Monday to discuss extending coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and to confer about a plan to re-open the economy.

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