Corona in Austria: quarantine obligation lifted – model for Germany?
WIf you want to take a vacation from the pandemic, you are currently in good hands in Austria. At the beginning of August, the neighboring country shifted down another gear in the fight against the virus: By regulation, the Austrian Ministry of Health has made it compulsory for people who have tested positive for Corona and are symptom-free to quarantine if they are wearing an FFP2 mask. This applies to all professions and activities – including in the medical field.
Austria has thus implemented what is being demanded by some representatives in the health sector in Germany. For example, Andreas Gassen, Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians, called for an end to the obligation to isolate last week in view of the staff shortages in the hospitals. Headwind came from Karl Lauterbach (SPD). “Infected people must stay at home,” the Federal Minister of Health made clear.
What happens when nurses and doctors who test positive work shifts in the hospital can now be admired in Austria – at least in some federal states. Because the regulation on the end of isolation WILL never be implemented uniformly. While hospital staff who have fallen ill with Corona are still not allowed to go to work in some federal states, this has been possible in other federal states since the beginning of August.
The different implementation of the regulation makes it difficult for both the medical staff and the patients to get an overview of what actually applies in which federal state and hospital. Professional associations of doctors and nurses also vehemently criticize the end of the obligation to isolate. You see the well-being of the patient at risk.
The federal states of Vienna and Lower Austria show how differently the regulation is interpreted at the end of the quarantine. For example, hospital employees in the Austrian capital are still not allowed to come to work with a positive test, regardless of whether they have symptoms or not. This is handled quite differently in Lower Austria. The Lower Austrian Provincial Health Agency reports that asymptomatic employees who have tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 can start work “if they meet certain hygienic requirements”.
For example, infected doctors and nurses in Lower Austria’s clinics would have to wear a mask throughout. In addition, they would not be used in particularly sensitive areas. “These employees may not be deployed in areas with immunocompromised patients, such as in oncology, in dealing with transplant patients, in intensive care units, but also in neonatology,” says the state health agency. Infected people with symptoms, on the other hand, should only start work if they can show a negative PCR test result.
In Salzburg, too, Covid-positive employees without symptoms should be able to work in hospitals. However, contact between infected people and patients there should be avoided on all wards. Like handles Carinthia. In addition to Vienna, Styria and Burgenland are also opposed to the use of symptom-free infected people. In Upper Austria, employees who have tested positive should only be deployed in exceptional cases. Vorarlberg does not want to use infected staff for the time being, but reserves the right to do so.
In the state of Tyrol, however, it is still largely unclear what to expect from clinic staff and patients. Tirol Kliniken, operators of the Innsbruck University Hospital, for example, will only “determine in the course of the week how exactly we will deal with the new regulation”. However, it is clear that sick people with symptoms are not allowed to go to work.
At the same time, Tirol Kliniken emphasizes that the regulation would “certainly give the hospitals some flexibility”. The operator speaks of a “challenging situation” for the clinics in view of sick employees, the holiday season and the general situation on the job market.
Total paradigm shift
The Austrian Health and Nursing Association, on the other hand, is “not happy” with the end of the isolation requirement for hospital employees. According to the President of the Association, Elisabeth Potzmann, the new ordinance for staff is a complete paradigm shift from the previously applicable rules.
“An infection transmission, also by the staff, is of course never one hundred percent contact. But sending positively tested personnel to sick and vulnerable people has a completely different dimension overall,” Potzmann told WELT. According to Potzmann, many nurses would also not want to work if they were infected “because the fear of infecting someone” would be very stressful.
The Austrian Health and Nursing Association explicitly addresses the patients. “We advise people in need of care and their relatives to expressly communicate that they do not wish to be cared for by infected staff,” says Potzmann. She assumes that the carriers will also comply with these requests. Because: “Ultimately, this is also about liability issues.”
Corona-positive relatives are not allowed to enter
The end of the obligation to isolate is also rejected by the Austrian Medical Association. Its Vice President Harald Mayer criticized the regulation on the ORF broadcaster Ö1 as a “mixture of irresponsibility, negligence, and it’s probably on the verge of physical harm to non-sick people”. Mayer assumes that the health system will be overwhelmed again in the fall. Because even asymptomatic employees can infect colleagues, which can lead to even more staff absences.
In the case of doctors and nurses, corona-positive relatives are still prohibited from entering hospitals and nursing homes under the new regulation. After all, this rule applies uniformly in all federal states.
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