Gulf News

South African hospitals running low on oxygen

All Covid-19 wards full as country becomes new global hot spot

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The coronaviru­s storm has arrived in South Africa, but in the overflowin­g Covid-19 wards the sound is less of a roar than a rasp.

Medical oxygen is already low in hospitals at the new epicentre of the country’s outbreak, Gauteng province, home to the power centers of Johannesbu­rg and the capital, Pretoria. Health Minister Zweli Mkhize, visiting a hospital yesterday, said authoritie­s are working with industry to divert more oxygen their way.

Some of the hospital’s patients spilt into heated tents in the parking lot. They lay under thick blankets in the middle of winter in the Southern Hemisphere, with a cold front arriving this weekend and temperatur­es expected to dip below freezing.

South Africa overnight posted another record daily high of confirmed cases, 13,674, as Africa’s most developed country is a new global hot spot with 238,339 cases overall. More than a third are in Gauteng.

“The storm that we have consistent­ly warned South Africans about is now arriving,” Mkhize said this week.

A nurse at Chris Hani Baragwanat­h Hospital _ the third largest hospital in the world with more than 3,000 beds _ painted a bleak picture, saying new patients with the virus are now being admitted into ordinary wards as the Covid-19 ones are full.

“Our hospital is overloaded already. There has been an influx of patients over the last two weeks,” the nurse said, speaking to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to give interviews.

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