Imperial Valley Press

Hungary’s doctors warn of soaring coronaviru­s deaths in weeks ahead

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BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — Doctors in Hungary are warning that a lack of medical sta qualified to treat coronaviru­s patients in intensive care units could soon lead to soaring deaths and a breakdown in the country’s fragile health care system despite the government’s expensive medical equipment purchases.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban last week announced the country’s strictest pandemic restrictio­ns to date to combat rapidly rising coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ations and deaths, predicting that without the measures Hungary’s health care system had only a “50% chance” of coping with the pandemic.

The government has ordered hospitals to expand ICUs to accommodat­e the rapid rise in COVID-19 patients and earlier this year purchased 16,000 ventilator­s at a cost of 842 million euros for the expected surge this fall.

“All the technical equipment needed ... is available,” Orban said last week.

But Hungarian Chamber of Doctors has warned that the number of ICU beds and ventilator­s are overshadow­ed by a lack of qualified doctors and nurses to treat ICU patients.

“Government communicat­ion pushes that we have 16,000 ventilator­s and are capable of creating 4,000 intensive care beds, but this is just not true,” said Peter Almos, vice-president of the Hungarian Chamber of Doctors. “You have the beds, but you don’t have the nurses and doctors who can treat (the patient) on the bed, so they just lie there.”

New restrictiv­e measures that took e ect last week — including an 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew, mandatory mask-wearing in public, a 10-person ceiling on fam

ily gatherings and remote learning for high school and university students — were taken “too late,” Almos said.

Hungary has 2,000 specialist­s for ICU wards and a similar number of ICU nurses. But the recent sharp rise in hospitaliz­ations has led to a patient-to-doctor ratio of 20to-1 in some ICUs, which Almos said will “obviously lead to a high mortality rate.”

“The (patient) load we see now has resulted in suboptimal treatment of coronaviru­s patients. The mortality rate in some ICUs was 30% in springtime and now it’s 50%, and it’s going to climb higher in the coming weeks,” he said.

As of Tuesday, 7,477 COVID-19 patients were being treated in Hungarian hospitals and 576 were on ventilator­s. The country of nearly 10 million people has seen 3,281 confirmed coronaviru­s deaths, half of them in the last three weeks.

Intensive care units across Europe are struggling to cope with spiking patient loads that are nearing and sometimes surpassing levels seen at last spring’s peak. In France, Italy and Spain, hospitals have struggled with dwindling ICU beds, and last week, France’s coronaviru­s tracking app put the ICU capacity taken up by COVID-19 patients at 92.5% and rising.

Hungary’s government has faced criticism for purchasing more ventilator­s than can be realistica­lly deployed and for paying China much more per unit than other European countries. While Hungary purchased 567 tons of respirator­y equipment from China for $564 million Germany purchased nearly twice that weight for less than $36 million.

 ?? ZOLTAN MATHE/MTI VIA AP ?? Police o cers control the tra c in downtown Budapest during the curfew of the state of emergency as part of the containmen­t measures of Covid-19 in Budapest, Hungary, late Wednesday.
ZOLTAN MATHE/MTI VIA AP Police o cers control the tra c in downtown Budapest during the curfew of the state of emergency as part of the containmen­t measures of Covid-19 in Budapest, Hungary, late Wednesday.

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