Worst-hit German district to become coronavirus ‘laboratory’
Study will follow 1,000 people in Heinsberg to create plan for how to deal with virus
German scientists have announced what they described as a first-of-its-kind study into how coronavirus spreads and how it can be contained, using the country's worst-hit district as a real-life laboratory.
The virus has spread more widely among the 250,000 residents of Heinsberg - a district in North Rhine-Westphalia bordering the Netherlands - than anywhere else in Germany, with 1,281 confirmed infections and 34 deaths. More than 550 people have recovered from the illness so far. The advance of the virus in Heinsberg, nicknamed "Germany's Wuhan" after the Chinese city where the global pandemic emerged, is between two to two and a half weeks ahead of the rest of the country.
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