Germany suffers worst daily spike in coronavirus cases since May with 1,226 new infections as health minister warns alcohol-fuelled parties are partly to blame for the rise
- The 1,226 new cases are the highest figure since May 9, bringing total to 218,519
- 7-day average of daily cases has risen from 350 to 900 in the space of a month
- Health minister Jens Spahn warned outbreaks are in 'almost all parts of Germany'
Germany saw its worst daily spike in coronavirus cases for three months today as a 'very concerning' rebound in infections continues to gather pace.
Health officials announced 1,226 new cases this morning, the highest figure since May 9 - bringing the total from 217,293 to 218,519.
The seven-day average of new cases is now above 900, having been as low as 350 a month ago.
Angela Merkel's health minister said today there were outbreaks happening in almost all of Germany and warned that every new case was making track-and-trace procedures harder.
He added that the rise was partly being driven by parties and family gatherings - warning that the virus can spread quickly 'when there's alcohol involved'.
Germany today suffered its worst daily spike in coronavirus cases since May 9 as 1,226 new infections were added to the tally
Germany's daily death toll has mostly remained in single figures despite the rising infections
Having not seen 1,000 cases in a day from for nearly three months, Germany has now crossed that threshold four times in the last week.
The last seven days have seen nearly 6,500 new infections, up from 5,096 the week before and fewer than 3,000 per week as recently as mid-July.
Germany's R rate has been above the 1.0 threshold for most of the last month, although it fell to 0.97 in the latest update on Tuesday.
Health officials say the ongoing rise is 'very concerning' and have linked it to travellers returning from summer holidays elsewhere in Europe.
Germany yesterday extended its travel warning for Spain to cover Madrid and the Basque country, having previously curtailed travel to Catalonia and nearby areas.
While cases have been rising in Germany for several weeks, the daily death toll has mostly remained in single figures.
Six new deaths in the last 24 hours brought the death toll from 9,201 to 9,207 today, still substantially lower than in Britain, Spain, France or Italy.
Health minister Jens Spahn told German radio today that there were smaller and larger outbreaks happening in most of the country, in contrast to previous spikes which were confined to particular neighbourhoods or factories.
Only 46 districts have not recorded a case in the last week, down from 120 a month ago when cases were at their lowest.
'This obviously - if we don't all watch out now - can lead to a certain dynamic' and the reemergence of the pandemic,' Spahn said.
The health minister reiterated appeals to wear masks, keep distance and not go overboard in social settings.
He said: 'When there's alcohol involved, when a festive event turns into a party, it can go very, very quickly.'
The Robert Koch diseases institute (RKI) which gathers the figures says the rising numbers are 'very concerning'.
'A further worsening of the situation must be avoided. This will only succeed if the entire population continues to be committed to decreasing transmission,' it says.
Some schools have gone back in Germany in the last two weeks, with differing rules in each of the 16 states.
Pupils in Schleswig-Holstein are encouraged to wear masks in the classroom, while in Berlin they are compulsory in corridors and communal areas but not during lessons.
Pupils wearing face masks gather in the sports hall for an information session at a comprehensive school in Duisburg in western Germany today
A traveller arriving in Germany gets his swab sample collected in a Covid-19 walk-in test center at Cologne Bonn Airport
The rising numbers in Germany come amid fears of a second wave across Europe, with France and Spain also seeing alarming increases in infections.
France's seven-day average is now at 1,691 new cases per day, the highest level since April and up from just over 500 in mid-July.
Prime minister Jean Castex warned that the public was becoming careless and said that the 'rebound in the epidemic' could become 'hard to control'.
The increase has led to fears that France will be the next country to be struck off Britain's list of approved countries for travel.
Spain has already been cut off and cases have continued to mount since then, with the seven-day average now at 3,357 cases per day compared to 480 a month ago.
Spahn, the German health minister, also voiced doubts about Vladimir Putin's claims on Tuesday that Russia has developed the world's first coronavirus vaccine.
Spahn said he was 'very sceptical' about Putin's announcement, saying the jab had not been 'sufficiently tested'.
Russia has made the vaccine race a matter of national prestige and has named the product 'Sputnik V' after the former Soviet space satellites.
'It's not about being first somehow - it's about having an effective, tested and therefore safe vaccine,' Spahn told Deutschlandfunk radio.
'I would be pleased if we had an initial, good vaccine but based on everything we know - and that's the fundamental problem, namely that the Russians aren't telling us much - this has not been sufficiently tested.'
German health minister Jens Spahn (pictured) warned that outbreaks were happening across most of the country
Spahn added: 'In order to have trust in such a vaccine, I think it is very, very important, even during a pandemic, to properly do studies, the relevant tests and especially to make them public.
'The problem is that we know very little about it as the Russian authorities are not being very transparent.'
Government officials have said it will be administered to medical personnel, and then to teachers, on a voluntary basis in the coming weeks.
Mass roll-out in Russia is being lined up for October and officials claim that 20 countries have already ordered a billion doses of the vaccine.
While experts have not dismissed the possibility that 'Sputnik V' is effective, scientists say there is 'little detail' on the vaccine and warn that it is 'not possible to know' whether it works without proper data.
Prof Francois Balloux, a biologist at University College London, slammed Putin's move as 'reckless and foolish' and said that 'vaccination with an improperly tested vaccine is unethical'.
'Any problem with the Russian vaccination campaign would be disastrous both through its negative effects on health, but also because it would further set back the acceptance of vaccines in the population,' he warned.
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