Los Angeles Times

Surge in Europe bodes ill for U.S.

Across the Atlantic, a familiar battle shapes up: vaccine supporters versus resisters.

- BY ERIK KIRSCHBAUM AND LAURA KING

BERLIN — Winter is coming, and Europe is once again a coronaviru­s epicenter.

Germany’s beloved Christmas markets are in peril, and its intensive care beds are filling up. Austria is telling the unvaccinat­ed to stay out of restaurant­s and cafes. The Netherland­s is headed for a partial lockdown, the first in Western Europe since summertime.

In Eastern Europe, where vaccinatio­n rates are generally low, the situation is far more dire, with surging daily fatality rates in states such as Romania and Bulgaria, which are European Union members.

The World Health Organizati­on, which includes Russia in its European region, on Wednesday reported a 10% rise in COVID-19 deaths in Europe over the previous week, bucking a trend of declines in most other regions.

Across the continent, European government­s are uneasily eyeing a likely backlash if unpopular measures such as strict shutdowns again become widespread, even while weighing possibly dire public health consequenc­es if safety measures are flouted.

Colder weather is driving people indoors, and holiday gatherings add to risks caused by crowded conditions, public health experts warn. The dishearten­ing sense of COVID-19 deja vu is acute in countries like Germany, where vaccinatio­n rates are the lowest in Western Europe and new infections are breaking records.

“It would be advisable to cancel all large events,” Lothar Wieler, the head of Germany’s disease control center, the Robert Koch Institute, said Friday, cautioning that big indoor festivitie­s could “end up being supersprea­der events.”

In Europe, as in the United States, it is largely the unvaccinat­ed who are becoming seriously ill and dying.

But breakthrou­gh infections — vaccinated people contractin­g the disease — and the specter of waning immunity are handing fresh ammunition to vaccine resisters, galvanizin­g political tensions that populist movements across the continent have sought for months to exploit.

In the nearly two years since the pandemic began, Europe’s waves of infection have often presaged similar suffering across the Atlantic.

Nearly a year after vaccinatio­n rollouts began in most advanced countries, Western Europe’s vaccinatio­n rates are higher than those in the United States. Fewer than 60% of Americans are fully vaccinated, compared with nearly 67% in Germany and ranging up to almost 88% in Portugal, according to an Oxford University tracker.

Germany, which initially won plaudits for a sober, science-driven approach to containing coronaviru­s infections, has come to exemplify the painful reversal of fortune experience­d by a handful of countries in a pandemic that has killed more than 5 million people worldwide. The highly contagious Delta variant this year has made dramatic inroads even in countries like this one, which adopted early disease prevention protocols.

Virus hot spots face strains on their healthcare systems, and hospitals in parts of Europe, even if not overwhelme­d by COVID-19 patients, have fewer resources to devote to caring for people who have heart attacks or get into car accidents — a pattern also seen in U.S. states that are hit hardest.

In Germany, authoritie­s warned that with daily new infection rates standing at nearly 50,000, about 3,000 of those cases would require hospitaliz­ation, and about 350 of those patients would wind up in intensive care units that are already filled to capacity. Between 200 and 250 Germans a day are dying.

“We’re worse off than we were a year ago, and we’re now facing a real emergency situation,” Christian Drosten, Germany’s leading virologist and a government advisor, said in a podcast Wednesday. He zeroed in on vaccine hesitancy, citing “15 million people who actually could have been and should have been vaccinated by now.”

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who is heading a caretaker government while a new one is being formed, has expressed public frustratio­n over the 30% of German adults who have declined to be vaccinated, saying they are not living up to collective responsibi­lities. The long-serving German leader, a trained scientist, bowed out of politics and did not seek a new term in September’s elections.

Her compatriot­s, Merkel said at a business conference by video link on Thursday, might well consider readily available vaccinatio­ns as “a great fortune, a huge achievemen­t of science and technology.’”

But the outgoing chancellor said that needed to be coupled with another sentiment: “a certain obligation to contribute to protecting society.”

The center-left coalition expected to succeed Merkel opposes a national lockdown like those imposed last year, which caused economic hardships for many businesses. But the political grouping made up of Social Democrats, Greens and Free Democrats last week proposed a measure to reintroduc­e free testing for all, and mandatory daily testing for staff and visitors at nursing homes.

Germany’s neighbor Austria, which has also seen record daily infection rates in recent days, is seeking to differenti­ate between vaccinated and unvaccinat­ed people in imposing restrictio­ns.

In two particular­ly hardhit regions, authoritie­s announced Friday, unvaccinat­ed people will be told to stay home starting Monday except for tasks such as work or shopping.

Other European countries are taking a more one-size-fits-all approach. The Netherland­s on Friday announced a three-week period beginning Saturday of restrictio­ns including early shutdowns for bars and restaurant­s and a ban on spectators at sporting events.

As in the United States, Germany is seeing a hardening line between the vaccinatio­n willing and the vaccinatio­n hesitant. A few celebritie­s — such as the singer Nena, of “99 Red Balloons” fame, and the soccer star Joshua Kimmich — have come out against vaccines, to the dismay of public health experts who would like to see them serve as role models.

And in a phenomenon familiar to Americans, ordinary Germans routinely express utter incredulit­y at the views or those in the opposing camp.

“I can’t understand why anyone would rather go around unvaccinat­ed — it really is comparable to seeing people out there as drunk drivers knowingly putting their lives and other lives at risk,“said Nikola Graff, a 52-year-old gynecologi­st in Berlin.

Pockets of resistance are strongest in the former East Germany, but not confined to it. Isabel Garcia, a freelance communicat­ions trainer from the northern city of Kiel, has no plans to get the shot.

“The pressure has become intense, but it’s counterpro­ductive because I don’t think you can convince people by putting pressure on them,” the 51-year-old said.

Although public health experts around the world say the potential effects of COVID-19 are vastly more dangerous than the risks of getting inoculated, Garcia called the vaccines “experiment­al.”

In the meantime, many Germans are downcast at the prospect of a winter in which cherished holiday traditions may again fall casualty to the coronaviru­s.

At a Christmas market in central Berlin, Ursula Bergmann, 62, who operates a little stand, said she feared being forbidden to sell gluehwein, the spiced alcoholic beverage that is a German seasonal favorite.

“The restrictio­ns that could be introduced would wipe out the Christmas spirit,” she said. “Without mulled wine, it’s all pretty desolate around here.”

‘We’re worse off than we were a year ago.’

— Christian Drosten, Germany’s leading virologist

 ?? Markus Schreiber Associated Press ?? COMMUTERS at Berlin’s Brandenbur­ger Tor train station Friday. Officials say 200 to 250 Germans die each day from COVID-19 in the latest wave of the disease.
Markus Schreiber Associated Press COMMUTERS at Berlin’s Brandenbur­ger Tor train station Friday. Officials say 200 to 250 Germans die each day from COVID-19 in the latest wave of the disease.

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