Germany's health minister on Friday urged the country's 16 states to consider stepping up their measures against the coronavirus amid a rise in new cases.
Karl Lauterbach said he favours requiring mask-wearing indoors, a measure that has largely faded in Germany except on public transport, in medical facilities and care homes.
The direction we're going in isn't a good one," Lauterbach told reporters in Berlin.
He added that it would be better for states to impose limited restrictions now than stricter ones later. The sooner we step on the brake the better it will be.
German authorities registered over 114,000 newly confirmed cases in the past 24 hours, and 165 COVID-related deaths.
A rise in cases in Bavaria has been linked to the recent Oktoberfest, which draws hundreds of thousands of visitors every year.
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Lauterbach said more could have been done to limit the spread of the virus at the beer festival in Munich, such as offering or mandating on-site testing for visitors.
The Health Ministry launched a new nearly 33 million-euro (USD 32 million) advertising campaign on Friday, using 84 cases studies of real people affected by COVID-19 to encourage vaccinations.
Lauterbach said getting the shot remains an important way of protecting yourself and others. The risk of death for people over 60 drops by 90 per cent if they get a fourth shot, he said.