Deutsche Welle (English edition)

German health care: Tackling COVID with paper, pen and a fax machine

The painfully slow digitaliza­tion of Germany's health care system has long been a source of frustratio­n. But the inefficien­cy is hampering attempts to fight the pandemic.

- The article was translated from German.

Whether it's Ebola, monkeypox, Lassa fever or meningococ­cus, for years, epidemics in Nigeria and Ghana have been fought with German software. "Surveillan­ce Outbreak Response Management and Analysis System," or SORMAS, is the name of the networked system for contact tracing and recording infection hotspots that epidemiolo­gists at the Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research (HZI) in Braunschwe­ig developed when Ebola was raging in West Africa in 2014.

The system, which is largely automated, has now been modified and matured to the point where it can be used to combat 37 infectious diseases, including COVID-19. Switzerlan­d and France, and also Fiji, are using SORMAS to combat the coronaviru­s. Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Nepal and Afghanista­n are also preparing to deploy it.

German health authoritie­s say no thanks

The Helmholtz Institute adapted the software for the German health service in May 2020, but the program designed to aid contact tracing and break infection chains has not been a big seller in the country of its inventors: It has so far only been installed in 132 of just under 400 municipal health offices.

A lot of time and manpower is lost in health department­s because most still work with handwritte­n lists and printed Excel spreadshee­ts. Data is often transmitte­d on paper by fax and

then manually typed into the computer. In the early days of his term in office, German Health Minister Jens Spahn remarked that in no other area is as much faxing done as in the healthcare sector. But he is no longer in the mood for jokes now.

Spahn earmarked €50 million ($60 million) in the short term for the digitaliza­tion of health offices in 2020. In addition, they were allowed to access SORMAS free of charge if they wanted to. However, the minister cannot force them to.

"The responsibi­lity for equipping the health authoritie­s and thus the decision on the use of digital tools lies with the states and the health offices themselves," a spokeswoma­n for the ministry said.

The situation is different when it comes to the digital connection and networking of doctors, hospitals and laboratori­es with the health authoritie­s and the Robert Koch Institute (RKI, the German government's central health authority). There, the conversion to DEMIS, the German Electronic Reporting and Informatio­n System for Infection Prevention, is in full swing. Spahn ordered that notifiable disease findings and

data may only be transmitte­d electronic­ally. The fax has had its day, according to the minister.

Conflictin­g infection figures

But of course it's not quite that simple. It is true that 97% of public health department­s are now equipped with DEMIS – but only with a slimmed-down version that is still in its test phase. And the RKI is not yet fully integrated into it.

Only some of the laboratori­es can transmit coronaviru­s test results electronic­ally to those involved. Most of the data ends up at the health offices electronic­ally, but still also by fax, and must be forwarded from there to the RKI. But the RKI uses its own software for this purpose: SURVNET.

In recent weeks, thousands of reports have been left because health department­s have been busy dealing with contact tracing, leaving little time to transfer infection counts to SURVNET. And to make the storm perfect: The health offices not only provide the RKI with the infection figures, but also the administra­tions at the county and state level. But they then sometimes also send the data by e-mail. As a result, the RKI repeatedly reports different infection figures in its daily situation report than the administra­tions of the cities, municipali­ties or federal states.

The consequenc­es of backwardne­ss

The federal government also struggles with the unreliable reporting system. Because the health offices are closed on weekends, the data on Mondays is basically incomplete. The closure between Christmas and New Year also had extreme consequenc­es. When the chancellor and the prime ministers discussed extending the lockdown at the beginning of the year, they had to admit that there was no reliable data with which to judge the incidence of infection in Germany. According to the chancellor, the piled-up reports would not be processed until mid-January at the earliest. But even now, some health offices have not yet worked through the backlog.

During the lockdown, there has been a controvers­ial debate about how far infection levels must fall before stores, restaurant­s and theaters can reopen. The upper limit repeatedly cited is 50 new infections per 100,000 inhabitant­s within seven days. A figure that is not based on scientific principles, but is oriented around the "average performanc­e of a health department," as Chancellor Angela Merkel recently confirmed.

This performanc­e could be improved with the right digital equipment. That's why in November the chancellor appealed to the state premiers of the federal states to use SORMAS to deploy a nationwide, joint contact tracing system as quickly as possible. An agreement was reached on the target date of early January 2021, but nothing

came of it, partly because individual states have already taken their own paths.

Rhineland-Palatinate, for example, has purchased the software MIKADO, which was developed by a company based in Kaiserslau­tern, i.e. in its own state. It is not compatible with SORMAS. Merkel had to concede a few days ago that the nationwide installati­on of uniform software "unfortunat­ely did not succeed" because some states preferred "other equivalent systems."

All states have promised to install SORMAS by the end of February. But that doesn't mean it will be up and running immediatel­y. "We can't switch from MIKADO in Rhineland-Palatinate to the use of SORMAS in the desired format now, in the middle of the greatest stress that the health offices are experienci­ng," said Merkel, who plans to "stay in conversati­on with the health offices" and keep showing them the advantages of a uniform digital system.

In other words, it will probably take a little longer before Germany can combat the COVID pandemic as digitally as Nigeria did in 2017, when it had three separate outbreaks at the same time.

 ??  ?? German health authoritie­s are wasting time and manpower with outdated systems
German health authoritie­s are wasting time and manpower with outdated systems
 ??  ?? Many health authoritie­s still use pen and paper and fax machines to collate date
Many health authoritie­s still use pen and paper and fax machines to collate date

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