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It estimates a paper rush of 100,000 to 200,000 sheets of paper a day, said Upper Austrian landlord spokesman Thomas Mayr-Stockinger, calling for a uniform system for digital recording. There are also changes in the 132 homes for the elderly and the elderly, where stricter security measures are now applied again.
According to the corresponding ordinance, the owners must record the name, address and telephone number of their guests, as well as the date, time and, if available, the table number, keep them for four weeks and deliver them to authorities if necessary. The data should be deleted after six weeks. “If it’s good for your health, we’ll do it,” Mayr-Stockinger said, and most innkeepers prefer it to advancing curfew. However, he fears an unprecedented amount of paperwork.
“It has to work digitally”
“It has to work digitally in the 21st century,” says Mayr-Stockinger. Currently there are registration applications that work with a QR code, but unfortunately there are many. If the guest and the host use the same application, it works, “but in the next cafeteria it may be different again.” Therefore, it advocates a uniform digital solution.
While corona groups are hardly known in the catering sector, most of them come from the private sector that is not really regulated, certainly there are infection groups in the state’s nursing and nursing homes. More recently, clusters were reported at seven facilities comprising a total of 81 infected residents and 31 employees who tested positive. The stricter security requirements now also apply to houses, of which there are 132 in Upper Austria with a total of around 12,700 spaces, but they will not be closed.
Registration also in nursing homes
Visitors are required to register upon entry, take fever measurements, provide information about their health, and not only adhere to general hygiene rules during their stay, but also wear a mask. Only two visitors are allowed per resident per day; there are exceptions for palliative patients.
The rules in the “red” Wels are stricter than in the rest of Upper Austria: only one visitor per person per day is allowed, the particularly affected Haus Neustadt (25 residents and 13 infected employees) is initially only allowed in exceptional cases and in more severe conditions. Safety precautions are entered.