Hartford Courant

As cases rise, Europe learns to live with virus

- By Norimitsu Onishi

PARIS — In the early days of the pandemic, President Emmanuel Macron exhorted the French to wage “war” against the coronaviru­s. Today, his message is to “learn how to live with the virus.”

From full-fledged conflict to cold war containmen­t, France and much of the rest of Europe have opted for coexistenc­e as infections keep rising, summer recedes into a riskfilled autumn and the possibilit­y of a second wave haunts the continent.

Having abandoned hopes of eradicatin­g the virus or developing a vaccine within weeks, Europeans have largely gone back to work and school, leading lives as normally as possible amid an enduring pandemic that has already killed more than 210,000 in Europe.

The approach contrasts sharply to the United States, where restrictio­ns to protect against the virus have been politicall­y divisive and where many regions have pushed ahead with reopening schools, shops and restaurant­s without having baseline protocols in place. The result has been nearly as many deaths as in Europe, although among a far smaller population.

Europeans, for the most part, are putting to use the hard-won lessons from the pandemic’s initial phase: the need to wear masks and practice social distancing, the importance of testing and tracing, the critical advantages of reacting nimbly and locally.

All of those measures, tightened or loosened as needed, are intended to prevent the kind of national lockdowns that paralyzed the continent and crippled economies early this year.

“It’s not possible to stop the virus,” said Emmanuel André, a leading virologist in Belgium and former

spokesman for the government’s COVID-19 task force. “It’s about maintainin­g equilibriu­m. And we only have a few tools available to do that.”

He added, “People are tired. They don’t want to go to war anymore.”

Martial language has given way to more measured assurances.

“We are in a living-withthe-virus phase,” said Roberto Speranza, the health minister of Italy, the first country in Europe to impose a national lockdown.

In an interview with La Stampa newspaper, Speranza said that though a “zero infection rate does not exist,” Italy was now far better equipped to handle a surge in infections.

“There is not going to be another lockdown,” Speranza said.

Still, risks remain.

New infections have

soared in recent weeks, especially in France and in Spain.

France recorded more than 10,000 cases on a single day last week. The jump is not surprising since the overall number of tests being performed — now about 1 million a week — has increased steadily and is now more than 10 times what it was in the spring.

The death rate of about 30 people a day is a small fraction of what it was at its peak when hundreds and sometimes more than 1,000 died every day in France.

That is because those infected now tend to be younger and health officials have learned how to treat COVID-19 better, said William Dab, an epidemiolo­gist and a French former national health director.

“The virus is still circulatin­g freely, we’re controllin­g poorly the chain of infections, and inevitably high

risk people — the elderly, the obese, the diabetic — will end up being affected,” Dab said.

In Germany, too, young people are overrepres­ented among the rising cases of infections.

While German health authoritie­s are testing over 1 million people a week, a debate has started over the relevance of infection rates in providing a snapshot of the pandemic.

At the beginning of September, only 5% of confirmed cases had to go to the hospital for treatment, according to data from the country’s health authority.

During the height of the pandemic in April, as many as 22% of those infected ended up in hospital care.

Hendrik Streeck, head of virology at a research hospital in the German city of Bonn, cautioned that the pandemic should not be judged merely by infection

numbers, but instead by deaths and hospitaliz­ations.

“We’ve have reached a phase where the number of infections alone is no longer as meaningful,” Streeck said.

Much of Europe was unprepared for the arrival of the coronaviru­s, lacking masks, test kits and other basic equipment.

Even nations that came out better than others, like Germany, registered far greater death tolls than Asian countries that were much closer to the source of the outbreak in Wuhan, China, but that reacted more quickly.

National lockdowns helped get the pandemic under control across Europe.

But infection rates began rising again over the summer after countries opened up and people, especially the young, resumed socializin­g, often without adhering to social-distancing guidelines.

Even as infections have been rising, Europeans have returned to work and to school this month, creating more opportunit­y for the virus to spread.

Instead of applying national lockdowns with little regard to regional difference­s, authoritie­s — even in a highly centralize­d nation like France — have begun responding more rapidly to local hot spots with specific measures.

On Monday, for example, Bordeaux officials announced that, faced with a surge in infections, they would limit private gatherings to 10 people, restrict visits to retirement homes and forbid standing at bars.

In Germany, while the new school year has started with mandatory physical classes around the country, the authoritie­s have warned that traditiona­l events, like carnival or Christmas markets, may have to be curtailed or even canceled.

Soccer games in the Bundesliga will continue to be played without fans until at least the end of October.

In Britain, where mask wearing is not especially widespread or strictly enforced, the authoritie­s have tightened the rules on family gatherings in Birmingham, where infections have been rising. In Belgium, people are restricted to limiting their social activity to a bubble of six people.

In Italy, the government has sealed off villages, hospitals or even migrant shelters to contain emerging clusters. Antonio Miglietta, an epidemiolo­gist who conducted contact tracing in a quarantine­d building in Rome in June, said that months of battling the virus had helped officials extinguish outbreaks before they got out of control, the way they did in northern Italy this year.

“We got better at it,” he said.

 ?? KIRAN RIDLEY/GETTY ?? People pack a bar Sunday on the Rue de Seine in Paris despite the recent rise in COVID-19 infections throughout France.
KIRAN RIDLEY/GETTY People pack a bar Sunday on the Rue de Seine in Paris despite the recent rise in COVID-19 infections throughout France.

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