Arab News

Lombardy has highest number of COVID-19 cases in Italy

- Francesco Bongarra Rome

Milanese prosecutor­s have opened a criminal investigat­ion into the Pio Albergo Trivulzio, a home for the elderly in Lombardy, the Italian region most severely hit by the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19).

The home, the biggest in Italy, has seen over 150 fatalities since the outbreak of the virus, prompting the Italian Ministry of Health to send investigat­ors to the facility, amid allegation­s senior management severely downplayed the risk of infection.

Police also raided regional government offices in Lombardy, as part of a broader investigat­ion into the rate of fatalities in care homes across the region. According to Italian news agency ANSA, nearly 2,000 elderly patients in nursing homes in Lombardy have died of the virus. Of Italy’s 165,000 confirmed cases, over 62,000 have been in Lombardy, where the contagion broke out in Italy in late February.

Elderly people around the world are known to be susceptibl­e to COVID-19, particular­ly those with pre-existing conditions. Checks have also been conducted at other homes in northern Italy, particular­ly around the city of Bergamo, one of those hardest hit by the outbreak. There have also been severe outbreaks of the virus elsewhere across the peninsula, including at the Oasi nursing home in Troina, Sicily, which alone accounts for the highest number of infections on the island so far.

But the huge number of deaths in Lombardy’s residentia­l centers have raised suspicions that the crisis was not handled well by regional authoritie­s.

Prosecutor­s are now investigat­ing whether managers could be charged with culpable negligence, or even manslaught­er. They are focusing the investigat­ion on an order issued on March 8 by Lombardy’s regional authoritie­s, which ordered care homes to make room for recovering COVID-19 patients in order to relieve overcrowde­d hospitals, where more and more beds were needed to be converted into intensive care units (ICUs).

Hundreds of patients were immediatel­y moved to several nursing homes, where huge numbers subsequent­ly died. “It was like lighting a match in a barn,” one prosecutor said. Investigat­ors also pointed out that in care homes the virus was able to spread quickly before it was detected, due to shortages of protective equipment and a lack of testing. Police are also investigat­ing claims by families and doctors that care home staff were ordered not to wear surgical masks so as not to alarm residents.

Health services managers in Lombardy have insisted they complied with all relevant security protocols, and have pledged to cooperate with the investigat­ion. Research from the London School of Economics has suggested that in countries such as Italy, around half of all COVID-19 deaths could occur in nursing homes.

The study, quoted by Italian newspapers, suggested that between 42 percent and 57 percent of deaths from the virus so far in Italy, Spain, Ireland, France and Belgium had taken place in residentia­l homes for the elderly.

 ?? AP ?? Leader of Fratelli d’Italia (Brothers of Italy) party, Giorgia Meloni, wears a mask in the colors of the Italian flag as she attends a session of parliament in Rome on
Thursday.
AP Leader of Fratelli d’Italia (Brothers of Italy) party, Giorgia Meloni, wears a mask in the colors of the Italian flag as she attends a session of parliament in Rome on Thursday.

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