KEY POINTS
  • The rate of new infections in Germany appears to be slowing.
  • But Germany's public health body, the Robert Koch Institute for infectious diseases, is cautious.
  • It told CNBC that the country's comparatively low mortality rate should not be taken as a measure of the country's success in combating the virus just yet.
Medical volunteers dressed in protective suits, masks, gloves and goggles wait to take blood samples from visitors with symptoms to test them for Covid-19 infection at a tent set up next to a doctor's office on March 27, 2020 in Berlin, Germany.

Germany, like other European countries such as Spain, Italy and France, has a high number of confirmed cases of the coronavirus. But unlike others, it has a much lower death toll so far.

Germany has 100,123 confirmed cases of the virus and has recorded 1,584 deaths from the virus, according to the Johns Hopkins University, putting the mortality rate at around 1.5%. In comparison, Italy has 128,948 cases of the virus, and has recorded 15,887 deaths, making the case fatality rate nearer to 12%. Spain's case fatality rate is around 9.5% currently.