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Germany embraces a testing culture amid pandemic pressures

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Germany has long been a nation with a collective culture and a reverence for scientific achievement. But two years into the COVID-19 pandemic, those tendencies have been kicked into overdrive. Matter-of-fact acceptance of testing has become part of life.

Rapid testing has long been key to Germany’s COVID-19 strategy, with the government working early to shore up supplies and subsidize costs for the public. In this way, science has always been at the forefront of Germany’s pandemic response.

Why We Wrote This

Germany’s test-heavy pandemic approach has morphed societal psychology to the point that testing – once a hot-button issue for a weary public – has now become part of everyday life.

Across Germany, public trust in science is higher now – by about 10 to 15 percentage points – than before the pandemic, according to the multiyear “Science Barometer” study.

Overall, this increased gravitation toward science is a positive development, sociologists say. “I think it’s really important that people are open to the struggle of science to provide answers to important questions facing society,” says Gerald Echterhoff, professor of social psychology at the University of Münster.

He adds that this shift might have lasting effects in other crisis management efforts, like “climate change, where people need to really assume responsibility, and live with restrictions in order to deal with the things that will be important for the benefit of society and social cohesion.”

Berlin

Max Diel wanted to go out to dinner, even with a pandemic rampant in Germany.

So the Berlin-based artist sauntered into one of the more than 15,000 free test centers that have popped up all over the country and got in line. Navigating the sign-up app was challenging, he says, and waiting in line can be annoying. But he got his free test result and an hour later, he was meeting with friends.

Though Germany is now considering loosening some pandemic restrictions within a month, for nearly a year, simply attending school, visiting a restaurant, or shopping at a clothing store has at times required showing a negative test result.

Why We Wrote This

Germany’s test-heavy pandemic approach has morphed societal psychology to the point that testing – once a hot-button issue for a weary public – has now become part of everyday life.

“I don’t see anything negative about the testing,” says Mr. Diel. “It just gives you the possibility to live with more freedom.”

Germany has long been a nation with a collective culture and a reverence for scientific achievement. But two years into the COVID-19 pandemic, those tendencies have been kicked into overdrive. Matter-of-fact acceptance of testing has become part of life, and public trust in science is also higher now than before the pandemic.

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