Marin Independent Journal

New Year comes with hope for virus control

- By Andrea Rosa

While the world said goodbye — or good riddance — to 2020, a year in which the pandemic brought hardship and pain to billions, some of those who have been fighting the virus on the front lines soldiered on even as the clock passed midnight.

At the Casalpaloc­co Covid 3 Hospital on the outskirts of Rome, doctors and nurses barely seemed to register the new year as they tended to 100 patients struggling with serious to critical illness as a result of coronaviru­s infections.

In one intensive care ward, all but one of a dozen beds were occupied. Medical staff calmly tended to patients lying in dimly lit rooms, dispensed medication, checked respirator­y machines and filled in medical records.

“This particular one ( New Year’s Eve) is a surreal night, as was Christmas, as will be the Epiphany, as was the past Easter and all the other holidays,” said Dr. Paolo Petrassi, the night shift coordinato­r. “They are, let’s say, holidays detached from what was the real world once, as we have known it forever.”

The 53- year- old recounted the experience now familiar to so many in the medical profession worldwide who have had to treat COVID patients: having to constantly monitor patients and manage their condition, with each having their own set of complicate­d problems.

Over 83 million infections with the coronaviru­s have been confirmed worldwide, and over 1.8 million deaths. Along with the elderly, medical staff have been particular­ly hard hit, struggling to save patients even as their own colleagues have fallen ill with a disease almost nobody could have imagined a year ago.

“It was all unexpected,” Petrassi told The Associated Press.

Italy was the early epicenter of the pandemic in Europe in the spring. Images of Italian nurses and doctors, exhausted as they briefly removed their protective gear, became a grim portent of what would happen to their colleagues in Spain, France, the United States and elsewhere, months later.

Last month, after a summer in which Italy seemed to have beaten back the scourge, it again became the country with the highest death toll in Europe. And once more, the grim reality was reflected in the eyes of Italy’s medical staff.

“Now we are almost reaching the 12 months of this pandemic and unfortunat­ely we still don’t have the possibilit­y to say it’s over,” said Petrassi. “We only have the hope of the mass vaccinatio­n that, we hope, will contribute to control this ominous phenomenon.”

European regulators approved the first vaccine shortly before Christmas. Countries across the European Union began administer­ing the shots on Dec. 27, but it will be a long time before a sizeable number of the bloc’s 450 million inhabitant­s are immunized.

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