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German researchers hold pop concerts to test how Covid-19 spreads

The experiment run by the University Hospital in Halle filled a Leipzig arena with volunteers to allow researchers to collect data in a “real life” simulation of a pop concert

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Singer Tim Bendzko performs for participants wearing FFP2 protective face masks at the RESTART-19 Covid transmission experiment (Photo: Sean Gallup/Getty)
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German researchers held a concerts for 1,500 people to see how Covid-19 would spread in a packed arena.

The experiment run by the University Hospital in Halle used a Leipzig arena filled with volunteers, to allow researchers to collect data in a “real life” simulation of a pop concert with strict health and safety controls.

Each volunteer took a coronavirus test ahead of time, tested negative, and had to wear protective masks throughout the day’s testing.

Researchers equipped each volunteer with contact tracers to record their routes in the arena and track the path of the aerosols – the small particles that could carry the virus – they emitted as they mingled and talked.

Fluorescent disinfectants were used to highlight which surfaces at the mock concert were touched most frequently.

German pop singer Tim Bendzko appeared on stage to create as realistic a reaction from the crowd as possible for three scenarios.

Afterwards, he said he had expected the day to feel more sterile and like an experiment, but that the crowd was into the concert.

LEIPZIG, GERMANY - AUGUST 22: Participants wearing FFP2 protective face masks watch singer Tim Bendzko perform in the RESTART-19 Covid transmission risk assessment study in a concert setting at an indoor arena during the coronavirus pandemic on August 22, 2020 in Leipzig, Germany. The study, organized by the University Hospital of Halle (Saale), simulates a live concert venue with several thousand audience members in three different scenarios in order to develop risk reduction measures for large events. Participants wear tracer devices to track their movements and sensors measure aerosol currents in the arena. All participants had to undergo a Covid-19 test within the last 48 hours and test negative in order to take part. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
The study, organized by the University Hospital of Halle (Saale), simulates a live concert venue with several thousand audience members (Photo: Sean Gallup/Getty)

“We really had a lot of fun,” he said. “We survived drive-in concerts this summer and in that respect, for us, this is a first step toward normality.”

Three scenarios

Under the first scenario, which simulated the very beginning of a pandemic, the concert-goers were kept close together in the room with no social distancing.

In the second, the researchers instituted hygiene measures and larger social distances between the volunteers.

In the third, a distance of 1.5 metres between participants was strictly enforced.

Stefan Moritz, who led the study, said researchers had only about a third of the volunteers they had hoped for, partially because many Germans are still away on summer holidays and partially due to fears of participating even with the safety measures taken.

LEIPZIG, GERMANY - AUGUST 22: Participants wearing FFP2 protective face masks take part in the RESTART-19 Covid transmission risk assessment study in a concert setting at an indoor arena during the coronavirus pandemic on August 22, 2020 in Leipzig, Germany. The study, organized by the University Hospital of Halle (Saale), simulates a live concert venue with several thousand audience members in three different scenarios in order to develop risk reduction measures for large events. Participants wear tracer devices to track their movements and sensors measure aerosol currents in the arena. All participants had to undergo a Covid-19 test within the last 48 hours and test negative in order to take part. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images) ***Bestpix***
The experiment will allow the authorities to develop risk reduction measures for large events (Photo: Sean Gallup/Getty)

But he said the experiment had gone well. “We are satisfied with the numbers,” he told reporters. “We have good data quality.”

The results of the study are expected in four to six weeks, he said.

Rising numbers

In general, Germany has been praised for its handling of the pandemic with its rapid response and robust testing. It has registered only 9,267 confirmed virus deaths so far, one-fourth of Britain’s virus death toll.

But the numbers have been rising recently, and Germany’s disease control centre reported 2,034 new cases of Covid-19 on Saturday, the first time the daily national increase has topped 2,000 since the end of April.

The Robert Koch Institute said coronavirus outbreaks are being reported in nursing homes, hospitals, schools and “especially among travellers and in the context of religious or family events”.

“The trend is very concerning,” the agency said.

Germany’s 16 states are in the process of resuming in-class teaching at schools. The possible risks of virus clusters building up in educational institutions and then spreading to families and further into society has been a matter of great concern.

In Berlin, one of the first states to return, at least 41 schools this week reported that students or teachers have become infected, and hundreds of them have been put into quarantine.

Additional reporting from Associated Press.

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