Kuwait Times

German virus patients are the ‘lucky’ ones

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AACHEN: After making it through the first night breathing on her own, 60-year-old Martina Hamacher can only say: “I’ve been lucky.” One of Germany’s earliest coronaviru­s patients, Hamacher is still tangled in some of the tubes and cables that helped keep her alive for 20 days in intensive care. “I’ve made it this far,” she says with a slight smile in Aachen’s university hospital. Things could have been worse for Hamacher had she not been treated in Germany, where the response to the crisis has been internatio­nally admired. Despite a high number of infections, the death toll has been much lower than in France, Italy or the United States.

Experts have credited Berlin for widespread testing and ample capacity for patients stricken with the respirator­y illness. Such large-scale efforts appear to have paid off, with patients receiving world-class care by medical staff who have stayed on top of the crisis. The hospital in Aachen has even been able to take patients from Belgium and the Netherland­s. “I’m very grateful for what the doctors and nurses did, without them I don’t think I’d still be here,” Hamacher says.

‘Doing our duty’

Sleeping patients unable to survive without assistance can be seen through yellow sliding doors that open into two-bed intensive care units (ICU) at the hospital. Amid constant beeping at different pitches and volumes from life-support machines, doctors and nurses work in their epidemic armor of masks, gloves, caps and protective suits. “This is part of our duty that we’re living up to,” said a nurse named Kathi. Aachen has 51 coronaviru­s patients at present, 35 of them in intensive care. “It’s important to me that this isn’t only tied up with death and technology,” says ICU director Gernot Marx. “We bring most people back to life, not because of all the machines we have but because of people who know what they’re doing, who commit themselves so strongly.”

Intense preparatio­ns

The Aachen hospital’s experience with coronaviru­s began slowly, Marx recounts. “We understood that we could and must use the time to prepare, because the images from Bergamo (in northern Italy) were horrifying. We were determined not to let that become the reality here.” Within a few days, the number of ICU beds surged from 96 to 136, an increase matched by other German medical facilities.

A further 70 places could be quickly set up if needed, but the country already had 11,000 free intensive care beds from a nationwide total of 25,000. “We were always prepared to take people in,” Marx says. More than 3,800 people have died in Germany out of more than 133,000 confirmed infections, a rate well below other big European Union countries such as France or Spain. And since April 12, more people have been declared disease-free each day than new infections have been reported, Health Minister Jens Spahn said Friday. — AFP

 ??  ?? AACHEN, Germany: Medical staff take care of a COVID-19 patient in an intensive care unit at the university hospital of Aachen on April 15, 2020. — AFP
AACHEN, Germany: Medical staff take care of a COVID-19 patient in an intensive care unit at the university hospital of Aachen on April 15, 2020. — AFP

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