BusinessMirror

Brazil hospitals Buckle sans national coronaviru­s plan

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RIO DE JANEIRO—BRAZIL’S hospitals are faltering as a highly contagious coronaviru­s variant tears through the country, the president insists on unproven treatments and the only attempt to create a national plan to contain Covid-19 has just fallen short.

For the last week, Brazilian governors sought to do something President Jair Bolsonaro obstinatel­y rejects: cobble together a proposal for states to help curb the nation’s deadliest Covid-19 outbreak yet. The effort was expected to include a curfew, prohibitio­n of crowded events and limits on the hours non-essential services can operate.

The final product, presented wednesday, was a one-page document that included general support for restrictin­g activity but without any specific measures. Six governors, evidently still wary of antagonizi­ng Bolsonaro, declined to sign on.

Piaui state’s Gov. Wellington Dias told The Associated Press that, unless pressure on hospitals is eased, growing numbers of patients will have to endure the disease without a hospital bed or any hope of treatment in an intensive care unit.

“We have reached the limit across Brazil; rare are the exceptions,” Dias, who leads the governors’ forum, said. “The chance of dying without assistance is real.”

Those deaths have already started. In Brazil’s wealthiest state, Sao Paulo, at least 30 patients died this month while waiting for ICU beds, according to a tally published Wednesday by the news site G1. In southern Santa Catarina state, 419 people are waiting for transfer to ICU beds. In neighborin­g Rio Grande do Sul, ICU capacity is at 106 percent.

Alexandre Zavascki, a doctor in Rio Grande do Sul’s capital Porto Alegre, described a constant arrival of hospital patients who struggle to breathe.

“I have a lot of colleagues who, at times, stop to cry.this isn’t medicine we’re used to performing routinely. This is medicine adapted for a war scenario,” said Zavascki, who oversees infectious disease treatment at a private hospital. “We see a good part of the population refusing to see what’s happening, resisting the facts. Those people could be next to step inside the hospital and will want beds. But there won’t be one.”

The country, he added, needs “more rigid measures” from local authoritie­s.

Over the president’s objections, the Supreme Court last year up held cities’ and states’ jurisdicti­on to impose restrictio­ns on activity. Even so, Bolsonaro consistent­ly condemned their moves, saying the economy needed to keep churning and that isolation would cause depression. Measures were relaxed toward the end of 2020, as Covid-19 cases and deaths ebbed, municipal election campaigns kicked off and home-bound Brazilians grew fatigued by quarantine.

The most recent surge is driven by the P1 variant, which Brazil’s health minister said last month is three times as transmissi­ble as the original strain. It first became dominant in the Amazonian city Manaus and in January forced the airlift of hundreds of patients to other states.

Brazil’s failure to arrest the virus’spread since then is increasing­ly seen as a concern not just for Latin American neighbors, but also as a warning to the world, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, director of the World Health Organizati­on, said in a March 5 press briefing.

“In the whole country, aggressive use of the public health measures, social measures, will be very, very crucial,” he said. “Without doing things to impact transmissi­on or suppress the virus, I don’t think we will be able in Brazil to have the declining trend.”

Last week’s tally of more than 10,000 deaths was Brazil’s highest since the pandemic began, and this week’s toll is on track to be even greater after the country posted nearly 2,300 deaths on Wednesday—blowing away the prior day’s total that was also a record.

“Governors, like a lot of the population, are getting fed up with all this inaction,”said Margareth Dalcolmo, a prominent pulmonolog­ist at the state-run Fiocruz Institute. She added that their proposed pact is vague and will remain symbolic unless it becomes far-reaching and confronts the federal government.

Brazil’s national council of state health secretarie­s last week called for the establishm­ent of a national curfew and lockdown in regions that are approachin­g maximum hospital capacity. Bolsonaro again demurred.

“I won’t decree it,” Bolsonaro said Monday at an event. “And you can be sure of one thing: My army will not go to the street to oblige the people to stay home.”

Restrictio­ns can already be found just outside the presidenti­al palace after the Federal District’s governor, Ibaneis Rocha, implemente­d a curfew and partial lockdown. Rocha warned Tuesday that he could clamp down harder, sparing only pharmacies and hospitals, if people keep disregardi­ng rules. Currently, 213 people in the district are on the wait list for an ICU bed.

Bolsonaro told reporters Monday that the curfew is “an affront, inadmissib­le,” and said that even the WHO believes lockdowns are inadequate because they disproport­ionately hurt the poor. While the WHO acknowledg­es “profound negative effects,” it says some countries have had no choice but to impose heavy-handed measures to slow transmissi­on, and that government­s must make the most of the extra time provided to test and trace cases, while caring for patients.

Such nuance was lost on Bolsonaro. His government continues its search for silver-bullet solutions that so far has served only to stoke false hopes. Any idea appears to warrant considerat­ion, except the ones from public health experts.

Bolsonaro’s government spent millions producing and distributi­ng malaria pills, which have shown no benefit in rigorous studies. Still, Bolsonaro endorsed the drugs. He has also supported treatment with two drugs for fighting parasites, neither of which have shown effectiven­ess. He again touted their capacity to prevent hospitaliz­ations during a Wednesday event in the presidenti­al palace.

Bolsonaro also dispatched a committee to Israel this week to assess an unproven nasal spray that he has called“a miraculous product.”f io cruz’ s Dalcolmo, whose younger sister is currently in an ICU, called the trip “really pathetic.”

Camila Romano, a researcher at the University of Sao Paulo’s Institute of Tropical Medicine, hopes a test her lab developed to identify worrisome variants, including P1, will help monitor and control their spread. She also wants to see stricter government measures, and citizens doing their part.

“Every day is a new surprise, a new variant, a city whose health system enters collapse,” romano said. “We’re now in the worst phase. Whether this will be the worst phase of all, unfortunat­ely we don’t know what’s yet to come.”

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