Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Surge tests limits of primary health care in Europe

- ARITZ PARRA Associated Press writer Barry Hatton in Lisbon, Portugal, Angela Charlton in Paris and Nicole Winfield in Rome contribute­d.

MADRID — Like many people, Alberto Perez of Madrid used a home test to discover that his headache and cold-like symptoms were caused by covid-19.

Unable to contact his local health center, where calls went unanswered and online appointmen­ts were booked up for the following week, he turned to a hospital emergency room for confirmati­on.

After waiting three hours to be seen, health workers there agreed with his self-diagnosis but provided no PCR test to ensure a more reliable result.

“The nurse seeing me said that, because I had not lost my sense of taste or smell, I had the omicron variant,” said Perez, 39, who works as an online game developer in the Spanish capital. “But how could she know?”

Overwhelme­d by people wanting tests, requiring medication or needing certificat­es to excuse their absence from work, primary health care services in Spain are operating well past their limit during the current phase of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The omicron variant has fueled the latest surge of infections, although data shows it produces less-severe disease than earlier strains.

Family doctors are usually the first stop for health care in Europe.

They and primary care nurses are viewed as vital to helping prevent sickness, keeping the pressure off hospitals and providing continuity of care.

In a country that only a few weeks ago thought itself relatively safe because more than 80% of the target population is fully vaccinated, the mounting workload in Spain has prompted doctors and nurses to cancel regular checkups for conditions other than covid-19 and postpone visits to vulnerable people at home.

On Tuesday, Spanish hospitals cared for nearly 13,000 covid-19 patients — the highest number since February. Nearly 2,000 were in ICUs, the most in almost five months.

Because Perez’s positive test had been taken at home, neither the hospital nor his local health center would spare the much-needed resources to give him a PCR test.

The PCR samples can be sequenced to determine virus variants, something nobody did with Perez or with many thousands of other positive cases from home tests in Spain.

“You are left with the feeling that there are no resources, that they have no people, and that all they do is cover up the reality by sending people home,” Perez said.

Caroline Berchet, a health economist at the Paris-based Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, says primary health care in Europe has been underfunde­d and understaff­ed for a long time.

The pandemic has simply exposed the resulting frailties in the system.

“Investment in primary health care is not enough across Europe” and beyond, Berchet said. In the 38 OECD member countries, which include the United States, on average only 13% of health spending in 2019 was devoted to primary health care, compared with 28% on in-patient care.

“Primary health care requires better funding and investment in all (OECD) countries,” she said, to ensure more staff, more training, better pay and working conditions, and a more flexible delivery of care.

Paloma Repila, a spokeswoma­n for SATSE, the biggest Spanish union representi­ng nurses, said that fewer hospitaliz­ations in the current surge mean that many people with milder symptoms are having a “brutal impact” on local health centers.

“Infection rates are so high that we are taking the pandemic out of the health care setting and we are asking people to be their own carers,” she said.

“Individual responsibi­lity is great, but asking people to self-diagnose, to deal with their own medical leave and to be left without any follow-up by profession­als, is extremely worrisome.”

In France, years of funding cuts to the public health system are blamed for shortages of doctors in rural areas.

There’s a similar problem in Italy, where general practition­ers are feeling the weight of the latest surge as well as the burdens of increased paperwork to certify people are safe to return to work and school, officials say.

Repila, the Spanish union spokeswoma­n, said authoritie­s should be worried about the consequenc­es.

“If you take the test at home, what variant of the virus do you have? We don’t know,” she said.

“Everything, including the length of self-isolation periods, is being decided based on sequencing that isn’t happening.”

Even the daily figures that provide headlines and inform the response by experts and policymake­rs are once again out of sync, like they were at the beginning of the pandemic.

That’s because home test results are not being reported to overwhelme­d health centers, either because phones are not being answered, because there are no appointmen­ts, or because people are simply not bothering.

Health Minister Carolina Darias last week appealed for people to report their positive tests, even when they show no symptoms or if they decide to stay at home with mild ones.

Unions and other profession­al groups say medical personnel cannot cope with the number of phone calls, video-assisted consultati­ons

“Infection rates are so high that we are taking the pandemic out of the health care setting and we are asking people to be their own carers.” — Paloma Repila, a spokeswoma­n for SATSE, the biggest Spanish union representi­ng nurses

and requests for tests, advice, treatment or issuing certificat­es for people who need to justify an absence from work.

Contact tracing, once viewed as a key to halting the pandemic, is something that has been long forgotten.

Primary care has been out of the media and public attention for much of the pandemic, when most of the concern was focused on the capacity to cope with the flow of patients into hospitals and intensive care units.

But labor groups and profession­al associatio­ns say the problems began much earlier, the result of years of underfundi­ng that has led to many temporary contracts for medical staff and poor health facilities.

After the 2008 European debt crisis, a conservati­ve government in Spain imposed strict austerity measures that meant significan­t budget cuts for the public health system. Similar cuts occurred elsewhere in Europe.

Spain’s center-left Socialist government last month unveiled a plan to improve the quality and accessibil­ity of primary health care in the next two years. Critics said the move was overdue.

Ten days after completing his quarantine at his Madrid home, Perez, the online game developer, kept testing positive with home kits but was still struggling to get an appointmen­t with his general practition­er.

His health center, which he finally reached by phone, told him to stay home for the New Year’s holiday and offered a phone call the following week.

“There are no doctors or nurses and then we are left to deal with this on our own,” Perez said. “How is that not linked?”

 ?? (AP/Daniel Cole) ?? A nurse waits for a blood sample analysis Dec. 31 in the covid-19 intensive care unit at the la Timone hospital in Marseille, France.
(AP/Daniel Cole) A nurse waits for a blood sample analysis Dec. 31 in the covid-19 intensive care unit at the la Timone hospital in Marseille, France.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Manu Fernandez) ?? People wearing face masks to protect against the spread of coronaviru­s walk Dec. 8 along a commercial street in downtown Madrid.
(File Photo/AP/Manu Fernandez) People wearing face masks to protect against the spread of coronaviru­s walk Dec. 8 along a commercial street in downtown Madrid.
 ?? (AP/Daniel Cole) ?? Nurse Marie-Laure Satta caresses her face Dec. 31 during a pause in her New Year’s Eve shift in the covid-19 intensive care unit at the la Timone hospital in Marseille.
(AP/Daniel Cole) Nurse Marie-Laure Satta caresses her face Dec. 31 during a pause in her New Year’s Eve shift in the covid-19 intensive care unit at the la Timone hospital in Marseille.
 ?? (AP/Laurent Cipriani) ?? Suzanne, 5, is tested for covid-19 on Tuesday in Albigny-sur-Saone, France.
(AP/Laurent Cipriani) Suzanne, 5, is tested for covid-19 on Tuesday in Albigny-sur-Saone, France.
 ?? (AP/Paul White) ?? People line up Tuesday outside a local health center in Madrid, Spain.
(AP/Paul White) People line up Tuesday outside a local health center in Madrid, Spain.

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