Santa Cruz Sentinel

As virus surges anew, Milan hospitals under pressure again

- By Colleen Barry

MILAN >> Coronaviru­s infections are surging anew in the northern Italian region where the pandemic first took hold in Europe, putting pressure again on hospitals and health care workers.

At Milan’s San Paolo hospital, a ward dedicated to coronaviru­s patients and outfitted with breathing machines reopened this weekend, a sign that the city and the surroundin­g area is entering a new emergency phase of the pandemic.

For the medical personnel who fought the virus in Italy’s hardest-hit region of Lombardy in the spring, the long-predicted resurgence came too soon.

“On a psychologi­cal level, I have to say I still have not recovered,” said nurse Cristina Settembres­e, referring to last March and April when Lombardy accounted for nearly half of the dead and one-third of the nation’s coronaviru­s cases.

“In the last five days, I am seeing many people who are hospitaliz­ed who need breathing support,” Settembres­e said. “I am reliving the nightmare, with the difference that the virus is less lethal.”

Months after Italy eased one of the globe’s toughest lockdowns, the country on Wednesday posted its highest ever daily total of new infections at 7,332 — surpassing the previous high of 6,557, recorded during the virus’s most deadly phase in March. Lombardy is again leading the nation in case numbers, an echo of the trauma of March and April when ambulance sirens pierced the silence of stilled cities.

Increased testing is partially responsibl­e for the high numbers, and many of the new cases are asymp

tomatic. So far, Italy’s death toll remains significan­tly below the spring heights, hovering around 40 in recent days. That compares with the high of 969 dead nationwide one day in late March.

In response to the new surge, Premier Giuseppe Conte’s government twice tightened nationwide restrictio­ns inside a week. Starting Thursday, Italians cannot play casual pickup sports, bars and restaurant­s face a midnight curfew, and private celebratio­ns in public venues are banned. Masks are mandatory outdoors as of last week.

But there is also growing concern among doctors that Italy squandered the gains it made during its 10-week lockdown and didn’t move quick enough to reimpose restrictio­ns. Concerns persist that the rising stress on hospitals will force scheduled surgeries and screenings to be postponed — creating a parallel health emergency, as happened in the spring.

Italy is not the only European country seeing a resurgence — and, in fact, is faring better than its neighbors this time around. Italy’s cases per 100,000 residents have doubled in the last two weeks to nearly 87 — a rate well below countries like Belgium, the Netherland­s, France, Spain and Britain that are seeing between around 300 to around 500 per 100,000. Those countries have also started to impose new restrictio­ns.

This time, Milan is bearing the brunt, accounting for half of Lombardy’s daily cases, which spiked past 1,800 on Wednesday. Bergamo — which was hardest hit last time and has been seared into collective memory by images of army trucks transporti­ng the dead to crematoria — had just 46.

The resurgence as the weather cools has so far been most strongly linked to vacations, both at home and abroad, as Italians flocked to beaches and crowded is

lands during a remarkably relaxed summer.

“The lockdown is a treasure that we scraped together with great effort and great sacrifice. We risk losing the results from a summer that in some ways was rather reckless,” Massimo Galli, the director of the infection disease ward at Milan’s Sacco Hospital, told The Associated Press. “The whole country acted as if they infections never existed, and was no longer among us.”

His hospital is on the front lines of the pandemic, but he declined to say how many beds were occupied with coronaviru­s patients.

Dr. Anna Carla Pozzi, a family physician in a Milan suburb, said she feared that fatigue is weakening the public’s response to the virus’s resurgence. That’s creating a situation similar to the one in January and February, when the virus was circulatin­g undetected in Italy, and nothing was being done, she said.

 ?? LUCA BRUNO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A medical staffer takes swabs as she tests for COVID-19 at a drive-through at the San Paolo hospital in Milan, Italy, Wednesday.
LUCA BRUNO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A medical staffer takes swabs as she tests for COVID-19 at a drive-through at the San Paolo hospital in Milan, Italy, Wednesday.

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