The Daily Telegraph

Top Merkel scientist says long isolation not required

- By Justin Huggler

FOURTEEN-DAY isolation periods are not necessary to defeat the coronaviru­s and a second wave of infections can be avoided, Germany’s leading government scientist said yesterday.

With what is now known about the virus, it is possible to contain further outbreaks, claimed Prof Christian Drosten, chief adviser to Angela Merkel’s government on the crisis.

One week’s isolation is enough to prevent the spread of infection, rather than the 14 days currently recommende­d by the UK and elsewhere, he said.

“In the beginning, of course, we needed the whole wide range of measures because we didn’t know exactly what would help. Now we know the virus better, we know better how it spreads,” Prof Drosten said in an interview with Der Spiegel.

“The incubation period and the time in which you are contagious are all much shorter than originally thought.”

There is still no sign of a second wave in Germany almost six weeks after the country began lifting its lockdown, and Prof Drosten said it may be possible to avoid one completely.

“There is a theoretica­l possibilit­y that we can get through without a second wave,” he said.

The way the virus is spread by relatively few people – the so-called “supersprea­ders” – means it is easier to control than initially feared, he said.

“We have a few people who infect many others. That sort of infection is easier to control than one that spread uniformly under the radar, as we assumed at first. If you notice where an outbreak is brewing, you have to hit it hard.” Prof Drosten said a policy of tracking and tracing is key, but warned that testing all those who have been in contact with an infected person can be too slow. “The latest analysis shows clearly you don’t start testing all possible contacts. That will always be too late. Instead, all contacts need to be isolated. But for a week, not 14 days.”

Prof Drosten is feted by many for steering the country through the crisis with a lower death rate than almost anywhere else, but he has been demonised by others as the man who imposed lockdown on the country. His department at Berlin’s Charité teaching hospital developed the first test for the virus in January, and he was warning of the danger before the pandemic arrived.

He claims that work may have prevented between 50,000 and 100,000 further deaths in Germany.

Early testing meant the first outbreak was spotted quickly in Germany, before “the dead had piled up, as in Italy, Spain and Great Britain”, he told Der Spiegel. “We’re really in a good situation right now. The lockdown has largely been lifted, we’re opening up more and more, and the outbreak does not immediatel­y resume,” he said.

“The virus may well be leaving us alone for a while now.”

But he warned a second wave was still possible. Summer temperatur­es may be providing some respite from the virus, but it could return in the winter. “The big question is: will it be more virulent? Or is it weakening?”

♦ France appears to have brought the spread of Covid-19 under control since the beginning of this month, reporting mortality rates lower than for the same period last year. Between May 1 and 18, France recorded 27,218 deaths, six per cent lower than during the correspond­ing period last year, and one per cent lower than in 2018, according to INSEE. the national statistics bureau.

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