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18 May 2020

Coronavirus DK: The virus is down but not out

The good news couldn’t keep going forever. The infections and deaths have been declining steadily for six weeks; the country just saw its first day without a single death; the relaxation of restrictions is proceeding on schedule. But the virus has not been eradicated. The new policy of systematic contact tracing may be responsible for the latest discovery. Yesterday, the urology surgery ward at Lillebælt Hospital in the provincial town of Vejle had to close after a large outbreak (DK).

Last week two patients in the ward tested positive, and tracing showed that a total of seven patients and 14 employees in the ward were also positive. The hospital tested 120 patients who had been in contact with the ward in the preceding week, and five tested positive. Most of the infected persons have only mild symptoms. Thirteen of the infected employees have been sent home for self-quarantine and one has been hospitalized.

The bug beats the tests

The patients had tested negative before they were admitted, as had the many of the employees on their first test, said Mads Koch Hansen, the medical director of the hospital, who maintains that hospital had followed all of the relevant guidelines: “We can say who was the first to show symptoms and how early we identified the infection, but we cannot confirm it [the beginning of the infection]. . . . This shows how tricky an illness we’re dealing with when people can be infected without testing positive.”

Hospitals in the Southern Denmark Region had begun to return to ordinary operations because of the low number of covid-19 cases. After this episode, they will reconsider their procedures. The ward in Lillebælt Hospital will reopen tomorrow after it finishes conducting a thorough cleaning.

No second wave here

People had otherwise become optimistic about reopening businesses and resuming other activities. The day before, Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen had said in an interview (DK) that she did not expect that Denmark would need to conduct another lockdown in the autumn, when some researchers are predicting a second wave of the illness. The country had now developed an infrastructure that enables it to react quickly to new outbreaks, she said. Frederiksen has also become open to the possibility of differentiating the restrictions and reopening by region because of the large geographic differences in the spread of the virus, which has been concentrated primarily in Greater Copenhagen.

Entitled to binge

Some people say Danish teenagers are spoiled. There is a tradition here that just after their graduation ceremony, gymnasium (high school) students are drawn around town in a large open trailer, cheering and honking, stopping at their homes for snacks, and drinking and partying long into the night. There has been some concern that this year’s graduates may not be able to enjoy the custom because of the epidemic and the increased risk of its spreading under those conditions. 

At the political debate on Thursday, several of the party leaders expressed a wish that this graduating class not miss out on this rich tradition (DK), even if it was borderline unadvisable because of the difficulty of following hygienic guidelines when drunk. One of them, Josephine Fock of the small Alternative Party, made the heretical suggestion that the rides could be held without drinking. After the debate, however, Fock clarified in a tweet (DK) that she had meant it only as an alternative if the rides would otherwise be disallowed and that she also preferred that they take place “WITH alcohol.”

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