"Reason for the crisis": Pediatricians advise against the obligation to wear a mask

The current wave of infections is pushing children's hospitals and medical practices to their limits.

"Reason for the crisis": Pediatricians advise against the obligation to wear a mask

The current wave of infections is pushing children's hospitals and medical practices to their limits. The climax of the crisis is yet to come, warns Thomas Fischbach, president of paediatricians. Nevertheless, he advises against a return to the mask requirement.

Pediatrician President Thomas Fischbach fears that the tense situation in the children's clinics will worsen, but considers a mask requirement to be counterproductive. "We are in a dangerous situation for the children, especially for the little ones," said the President of the Professional Association of Pediatricians (BVKJ) in view of the overcrowded medical practices and children's clinics due to respiratory diseases of the "Neue Osnabrücker Zeitung". And it could get even worse: "Because usually at the beginning of December we are only at the beginning of the cold season, so the peak of the infection wave is still ahead of us."

However, Fischbach rejected calls for a return to the mask requirement for children and parents. "The cry for masks is the usual reflex of politics. The mask requirement of the past two years is an important reason for the current crisis," he said. Because because of the masks, neither the children's nor the parents' immune systems were trained. Many children's practices and children's wards are currently extremely overcrowded. Experts are reporting an enormous wave of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infections, which can be dangerous for babies.

Fischbach called the announcement by SPD Federal Minister of Health Karl Lauterbach that nursing staff from the adult sector would be used to support pediatrics "insane". The German Nursing Council (DPR) was similarly critical. "You can only describe it as an act of desperation," DPR President Christine Vogler told the editorial network Germany. "In the clinics, only the minimum care can already be secured. We no longer have a ward where nursing staff can be withdrawn." Nurses from other clinical departments would also not automatically have the qualification to provide care in the pediatric intensive care unit.

In view of the shortage of skilled workers in social and nursing professions, Vogler also advocated a compulsory social year for all school leavers in Germany. "As a society, we have to come together again and learn that we have to devote more attention to the sick, children and the weak in the social system." Last but not least, this is shown by the current situation in the clinics, said Vogler.