Italy  and Austria share a border, but while one nation grapples with  crippling coronavirus deaths, the other is preparing to lift its  lockdown
 
https://news.yahoo.com/italy-austria...213416680.html
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Business Insider•April 9, 2020

A view of a deserted Graben Square amid coronavirus precautions in Vienna, Austria, on April 2, 2020.David Visnjic/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
- Austrian  officials plan to begin incrementally loosening coronavirus  restrictions starting with small shops on April 14 and larger businesses  from May 1.
 
- The country's government took aggressive steps to put the nation of nearly 9 million people on lockdown in mid-March.
 
- "Austria  has reacted faster and more restrictively than other countries. So we  have been able to prevent the worst from happening," said Austrian  Chancellor Sebastian Kurz.
 
- Denmark and the Czech Republic  are considering similar steps, but Hans Kluge, of the World Health  Organization, warned that "now is not the time to relax measures" but to  "double" down.
 
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Some  governments are wrestling with decisions that involve putting millions  of people on lockdown as the coronavirus continues to escalate — Austria  is not one of them.
 Instead, the nation's leaders are cautiously  tiptoeing toward gradually lifting restrictions that were enforced in  mid-March in response to the COVID-19 outbreak in 
neighboring Italy and 
its own ski resorts. Schools and non-essential businesses were closed, and people were urged to work from home.
 It's  because the Austrian government issued social distancing measures early  on in Europe's coronavirus fight that it was able to "flatten the  curve" and spare the country's nearly 9 million residents from the brunt  of the illness.
 It also boosted local face mask production to avoid depending on imports of the personal protective equipment, according to 
The New York Times.
 "Austria has reacted faster and more restrictively than other countries," 
Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz said in a press release.  "So we have been able to prevent the worst from happening. This  circumstance now gives us the opportunity to get out of this crisis  faster, but only if we all continue to consistently adhere to the  measures." 
 In all, Austria has confirmed more than 13,200  coronavirus cases and 295 deaths as of Thursday. At least 5,240 people  have recovered, based on data compiled by 
Johns Hopkins University.
 Austria's number of infections was doubling every three days when the lockdown began, 
The Times found. Now, the country's new infections have been declining since March 30, based on information from the statistics website 
Worldometer.
 
Worldometer data shows a downturn trend in Austria's daily new cases.Worldometer
On Monday, Austrian leaders announced that 
the lockdown will be loosened incrementally.
 Small shops, hardware stores, and gardens will reopen on April 14, and larger businesses will follow on May 1, according to 
The Washington Post.
 Hotels,  restaurants, and businesses like gyms and hair salons which involve  people being at close quarters to one another aren't likely to receive  permission to resume business until mid-May or even June, The Times  said.
 On Easter, which will be celebrated on April 12, a maximum of 
five people will be allowed to be in one room at the same time — unless they live in the same house.
 Upon announcing what he called "a step-by-step resurrection" of Austria's economy, Kurz stressed, "We are not out of the woods."
 Public  events are slated to pick up in July, while schools will remain  shuttered until fall and there's no word on when international travel  will be allowed, The Post reported.
 

 German  police officers stand guard at a checkpoint at the Austrian border,  where crossings have been severely restricted in an effort to rein in  the spread of the coronavirus.Andreas Gebert/Getty Images
 Although  officials are hoping to stimulate economic activity, people who emerge  from their homes to visit shops or use public transit must continue to  cover their mouths and noses. And can expect to be asked to stay at  least six feet away from anyone around them for several more months, per  The Times.
 The government plans to pay close attention to the  effects of these looser restrictions, Kurz said, noting, "We will very  closely monitor the number of new infections and will immediately pull  the emergency brake if need be," according to The Times.
 Denmark  and the Czech Republic are mulling similar moves, but the World Health  Organization's director for Europe, Hans Kluge, issued a warning on  Wednesday, the Times said. Some countries are seeing "positive signs,"  he acknowledged, but it's too early to begin lifting containment  measures.
 "Now is not the time to relax measures," he said at a  news conference. "It is the time to once again double and triple our  collective efforts to drive toward suppression with the whole support of  society."
 For her part, the head of virology at the Medical  University of Vienna, Elisabeth Puchhammer-Stöckl, told the Times that  the world continues to be "in unchartered territory" and will need to  learn to navigate this new normal in real-time.
 "We are still living in a pandemic," she said. "This virus is not going anywhere."
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