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Hospital workers in Denmark and Norway test positive for virus

Employees at hospitals in Norway and Denmark have been diagnosed with novel coronavirus, potentially exposing well over a hundred patients to infection.

Hospital workers in Denmark and Norway test positive for virus
The main building at Aarhus hospital in Denmark. Photo: Aarhus University Hospital
Oslo University Hospital announced on Friday afternoon that one of its employees had tested positive, more than a week after coming back from a holiday in northern Italy. 
 
Then on Saturday, Aarhus University Hospital reported that one of its employees had tested positive for the virus, adding that it had quarantined 30 people with whom the employee had been in contact. 
 
“We are extremely certain that the employee was not infected at the hospital, but instead brought the infection from Northern Italy,” Bjørn Atle Bjørnbeth, administrative director at Oslo University Hospital told Norwegian broadcaster NRK on Friday. 
 
The Aarhus hospital worker had returned this week from a medical conference in Munich, the Jyllands-Posten newspaper reported. 
 
“We are currently investigating where the person has been in recent days to find out who he has been in contact with, and that work is continuing this morning,” Anne Hempel-Jørgensen, from the Danish Patient Safety Authority told the newspaper. 
 
The main administrative building at Oslo University Hospital. Photo: Wikimedia Commons
 
The Norwegian health worker is believed to have been in contact with over 100 co-workers and patients at the hospital's eye clinic, who tend to be elderly, making them especially vulnerable. 
 
The employee tested negative to the virus after first reporting symptoms on Tuesday. Four other employees in the clinic, are now being tested for the virus, after experiencing difficulties breathing. 
 
According to Lars Østergaard, Aarhus University Hospital's head doctor, the Danish health worker had been around patients for three days before he tested positive. 
 
Allan Randrup Thomsen, a professor specialising in viral infections at Copenhagen University, told the Berlingske newspaper that it was “unfortunate from an infection perspective”, that the person had interacted with others for so long before his illness was detected. 
 
“This is significant and there is a risk of sickness among those he has met,” he said. 
 
The Norwegian Institute of Public Health has so far confirmed six cases of the virus. While the Danish Health Authority has confirmed three. 

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COVID-19

Public Health Agency recommends two Covid doses next year for elderly

Sweden's Public Health Agency is recommending that those above the age of 80 should receive two doses of a Covid-19 vaccine a year, once in the spring and once in the autumn, as it shifts towards a longer-term strategy for the virus.

Public Health Agency recommends two Covid doses next year for elderly

In a new recommendation, the agency said that those living in elderly care centres, and those above the age of 80 should from March 1st receive two vaccinations a year, with a six month gap between doses. 

“Elderly people develop a somewhat worse immune defence after vaccination and immunity wanes faster than among young and healthy people,” the agency said. “That means that elderly people have a greater need of booster doses than younger ones. The Swedish Public Health Agency considers, based on the current knowledge, that it will be important even going into the future to have booster doses for the elderly and people in risk groups.” 

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People between the ages of 65 and 79 years old and young people with risk factors, such as obesity, diabetes, poor kidney function or high blood pressure, are recommended to take one additional dose per year.

The new vaccination recommendation, which will start to apply from March 1st next year, is only for 2023, Johanna Rubin, the investigator in the agency’s vaccination programme unit, explained. 

She said too much was still unclear about how long protection from vaccination lasted to institute a permanent programme.

“This recommendation applies to 2023. There is not really an abundance of data on how long protection lasts after a booster dose, of course, but this is what we can say for now,” she told the TT newswire. 

It was likely, however, that elderly people would end up being given an annual dose to protect them from any new variants, as has long been the case with influenza.

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