Gulf Today

Tunisia faces COVID-19 ‘tsunami’ as deaths rise

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KAIROUAN: Tunisian hospitals are batling to keep operating as the number of people dying of COVID-19 spikes and bodies are let in rooms because mortuaries are running at full capacity.

“Some patients have died without us realising it,” said Imen Fteiti a nurse at the Ibn Jazzar hospital in the central city of Kairouan, one of the hardest hit by the pandemic.

Some bodies of COVID-19 victims have been let lying in rooms, next to other patients, for up to 24 hours because there were not enough staff to organise their transfer to overstretc­hed mortuaries.

Tunisia has officially recorded more than 15,000 deaths since the start of the pandemic last year with the toll rising in recent weeks.

More than 600 virus patients are in intensive care units around the country, and authoritie­s have set up field hospitals to cope with a crisis they have compared to a “tsunami.”

Doctors, nurses and non-government­al organisati­ons have sounded the alarm particular­ly for Kairouan, a marginalis­ed region where intensive care beds and oxygen supplies are lacking.

“We have reached a point where we don’t know who to assist first,” Fteiti said.

In Kairouan, 5,500 litres of oxygen are now needed daily to treat those stricken by COVID-19 compared to 400-500 litres two weeks ago before the number of cases spiked, regional health officials said.

And there are only 45 beds in intensive care units in Kairouan hospitals, both private and public, and just 250 oxygen cylinders are available, they added.

Since June 20, authoritie­s have imposed a total lockdown on six regions across Tunisia, including Kairouan, as the number of COVID-19 cases spiralled in the North African country.

The capital Tunis has been placed under partial lockdown since last week, with weekend lockdowns from July 10 to prevent crowds at beaches.

But the health situation in Kairouan, home to 593,000 people, is among the worst and for health workers it has become a nightmare.

At the Ibn Jazzar hospital there are only three nurses for 35 COVID-19 patients.

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