February 2020 From late January to early February, several groups of Danish citizens were evacuated from China. All were placed in quarantine and tested; none were infected. At the very end of February, three men tested positive for the virus. On 27 February 2020, Denmark confirmed its first case, a man from
Roskilde who had been skiing in
Lombardy, Italy and returned to Denmark on 24 February. The next day, a man in
Copenhagen tested positive. He had been skiing in Italy two weeks earlier, and the relatively long time period made it difficult to determine whether the virus had spread from him to others in that time. On 29 February, a man in
Aarhus tested positive; he was believed to have been infected at a medical conference in Germany.
March 2020 On 1 March, a person who was already in home quarantine was tested positive. The person had been in contact with the man tested positive on 28 February. ;3 March On 3 March, five people that had visited northern Italy and one person that had visited Iran were tested positive for
COVID-19. All six were placed in home quarantine. ;4 March On 4 March, there were four more cases confirmed in Denmark and the first confirmed case was reported from the
Faroe Islands (an autonomous territory in the Kingdom of Denmark), bringing the total number of confirmed cases to fifteen. All the new cases were placed in home quarantine. The case in the Faroe Islands was a man with mild symptoms that had returned home from a conference in
Paris, France. ;5 March On 5 March, there were five new confirmed cases. One of the cases was former Danish national football player
Thomas Kahlenberg, who had been infected at a birthday party in
Amsterdam, the Netherlands. This forced the Danish clubs
Brøndby and
Lyngby, and the Dutch club
Ajax to place some of their players and coaches, who had recently met with Kahlenberg, into quarantine. Kahlenberg described his symptoms as similar to a
flu, and he was placed in home quarantine. On the same date, the first Dane that had been confirmed infected on 27 February also became the first Dane to be declared fully recovered. ;6 March On 6 March, there were three new confirmed cases, including one in the Faroe Islands (the second case for this archipelago). ;7 March On 7 March, there were six new confirmed cases. Most Danes confirmed to be infected with had contracted it abroad, and they had infected a few people in Denmark (there had been no person-to-person spread within Denmark where the source was unknown). ;8 March On 8 March, there were eight new confirmed cases, including a patient first admitted to North Zealand Hospital
Hillerød with symptoms resembling
pneumonia. Another mild case where the patient was placed in home quarantine was the first person confirmed to have
COVID-19 in the
North Jutland Region, meaning that all five
regions of Denmark now had cases. ;9 March On 9 March, there were 53 new confirmed cases, bringing the total in Denmark to 90. Among all those infected, six were in hospital, but none of them required
intensive care. ;10 March On 10 March, there were 172 new cases, bringing the total in Denmark to 262. Among the new cases was one patient admitted to hospital, bringing the total to seven. ;11 March On 11 March, there were 252 new cases, bringing the total in Denmark to 514. One of the cases, who likely had become infected at a meeting where another attendee was infected, caused particular concern because the person worked in a nursing home. As a result, the elderly at the nursing home were isolated in their own rooms, they were closely monitored, and tests were being performed. Among all the infected people in Denmark, ten patients were in hospital, including two in intensive care. ;12 March On 12 March, there were 160 new confirmed cases, bringing the total in Denmark to 674. Among these were two at the nursing home where the elderly had been isolated and closely monitored since the day before because an employee was tested positive. On the same date, former footballer Thomas Kahlenberg announced that he had been declared fully recovered, making him the second publicly known recovery in the country. Whereas many early cases were related to people returning from ski holiday in northern Italy, many cases discovered later were related to people returning from ski holiday in
Tyrol in Austria. An 80-year-old man with a history of heart disease tested positive after having a heart attack and dying in the North Jutland Region. Although unclear whether the virus had played a role in it, the authorities counted it as the first fatality related to COVID-19 in Denmark. ;13 March On 13 March, there were 127 new confirmed cases, bringing the total in Denmark to 801. In addition, the Faroe Islands had their third confirmed case. Among all the infected people in Denmark, 23 were in hospital, including 4 in intensive care. ;14 March On 14 March, there were 26 new confirmed cases in Denmark, bringing the total to 827. Another 6 were confirmed in the Faroe Islands, bringing the total to 9 in this archipelago. The second person died from COVID-19 in Denmark, in the
Capital Region. It was an 81-year-old that was already weakened due to other serious diseases. she announced that nurseries and kindergartens would be opened again on 15 April and that
folkeskole would be reopened for pupils in years 1–6 (Danish:
0.-5. klasse); It had previously been strongly criticized that workers in a retirement home were asked to continue working after having had contact with sick persons, again against all expert advice, and apparently because of Danish Health Authority guidelines.
May–October On 12 May, Prime Minister
Mette Frederiksen announced a new offensive testing strategy, which aims to "strengthen the
contact tracing". The national testing strategy is based on three essential elements:
testing,
tracing and
isolation. The new testing strategy also charge the local
municipalities with providing holiday centres, hotels or the like, as a voluntary offer of self-isolation. As a part of new offensive testing strategy, the Prime Minister presented a new
government agency. The agency will be organized under the
Ministry of Justice. The
Ministry of Justice said that experience in dealing with COVID-19 in Denmark shows that there is a need for a consistent and transverse coordination and support of government efforts, for example to ensure the supply of socially critical infrastructure. The implementation of the new offensive test strategy, the detection of infection and better possibilities for self-isolation require a massive support from, among other things, the use of the test-system, security of supply and practical operation. At the same time, there is a need for health authorities in such a situation to focus on the core tasks of
health care. In order to strengthen more permanently the overall regulatory effort, this new
government agency was established. The agency is expected to be fully operational in August 2020. Masks/face shields become mandatory in public transport in August, with the mandate being extended to most public places in October.
November 2020 and onwards A major producer of mink pelts, the
government ordered
all the country's mink nationwide to be slaughtered over fears of viral mutations, following an outbreak of a mutated virus referred to as
Cluster 5.
[481] While the
State Serum Institute (SSI, ) suggested that this mutation was no more dangerous than other coronaviruses, SSI head Kåre Mølbak warned that the mutation could impact the development and effectiveness of
COVID-19 vaccines. On 5 November, it was announced that a new lockdown and movement restrictions would be implemented in seven municipalities of Northern Jutland beginning 6 November. On 29 June, health minister
Magnus Heunicke announced that the government had bought 1.17 million COVID-19 vaccines from
Romania. An agreement to phase out the requirement of masks in public was also reasched in June, but was in November reinforced along with several other restrictions. On the negotiations to reopen society in April 2021,
Freja Brandhøj stated on behalf of
Danmarks Restauranter & Caféer "We think it's a shame that we couldn't reach an agreement right away". On 21 January 2022, Denmark had 1.3 million confirmed cases, reaching an all-time high of 20-40 thousand daily cases throughout most of January. In February, most restrictions were lifted, with authorities stating that the virus was no longer a "critical threat". ==Testing, treatment and preventive measures==