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Bavaria's coronavirus testing plan draws skepticism

June 28, 2020

Bavaria, the German state with the most coronavirus cases and deaths, plans to offer tests to all its residents. Germany's health minister has warned that the move shouldn't lead to a false sense of security.

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A health workers holds several coronavirus antibody test barrels
Image: Imago Images

The southern German state of Bavaria announced on Sunday that it will offer coronavirus testing for all residents in what the state's health minister called a "corona test offensive."

"All Bavarian citizens will be promptly offered the opportunity to have themselves tested by an established contract physician, even without symptoms," state Health Minister Melanie Huml said.

Read more: Does Berlin have the pandemic under control?

The state will also foot the bill for tests that aren't covered by public health insurance.

"A cornerstone of our Bavarian test concept is that all people who want to be tested for a SARS-COV-2 infection should be able to find out whether they have been infected," Huml added.

Bavaria becomes the first German state to offer universal testing. Until now, testing has been focused on people with symptoms or possible exposure, as well as people whose professions increase the likelihood of coming into contact with the disease.

According to the Robert Koch Institute, Germany's disease control agency, Bavaria has recorded 48,294 coronavirus cases and 2,592 virus-related deaths, more than any other state.

The decision to over widespread testing follows a massive outbreak linked to a slaughterhouse in the western German state of North-Rhine Westfalia earlier this month.

Read more: Europe's meat industry is a coronavirus hot spot

Germany's COVID-19 app launched

Testing 'only a snapshot'

German health minister Jens Spahn expressed support for Bavaria's testing plan, but said people shouldn't obtain a false sense of security.

"Extensive testing makes sense, especially to contain regional outbreaks. We have adapted our federal testing concept accordingly," Spahn told the German news agency DPA.

"However, testing is only a snapshot. It shouldn't lull you into a false sense of security."

Karin Maag, the health expert for Chancellor Angela Merkel's center-right CDU party in the German parliament, expressed similar concerns.

"Immediately after a test, I know whether I've tested positive or negative. But I can become infected in the following days," Maag told the Bavarian-based Augsburg Allgemeine newspaper.

Maag's counterpart of the center-left SPD party, Karl Lauterbach, called for a more targeted approach to testing.

"We must ensure that the right people are tested and that the tests themselves become cheaper," Lauterbach told the Funke media group.

dv/mm (AP, dpa)