Santa Cruz Sentinel

As vaccinatio­ns lag, Italy’s elderly again pay a price

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One year ago, Bergamo’s state-of-theart Pope John XXIII Hospital verged on collapse as doctors struggled to treat 600 patients, with 100 of them in intensive care. Army trucks ferried the dead from the city’s overtaxed crematoriu­m in images now seared into the collective pandemic memory.

The picture is much improved now: The hospital is treating fewer than 200 virus patients, just one quarter of whom require intensive care.

But still unchanged as Italy’s death rate pushes upward once again is that the victims remain predominan­tly

elderly, with inoculatio­n drives stumbling in the country and elsewhere in Europe.

“No, this thing, alas, I was not able to protect the elderly, to make clear how important it would be to protect the elderly,” said Dr. Luca Lorini, head of intensive care at the hospital named for the mid-20th century pope born in Bergamo. “If I have 10 elderly people over 80 and they get COVID, in their age group, eight out of 10 die.”

That was true in the first horrifying wave and remained “absolutely the same” in subsequent spikes, he said.

Promises to vaccinate all Italians over 80 by the end of March have fallen woefully short, amid well-documented interrupti­ons of vaccine supplies and organizati­onal shortfalls. Just a third of Italy’s 7.3 million doses administer­ed so far have gone to people in that age group, with more than half of those who carry memories of World War II still awaiting their first jab.

“We should have already finished with this,” Lorini told The Associated Press.

Italy’s new premier, Mario Draghi, pledged during a visit to Bergamo on Thursday that the vaccine campaign would be accelerate­d. His remarks came as he inaugurate­d a park to honor the country’s more than 104,000 dead from the pandemic. As of early March, two-thirds of Italy’s virusrelat­ed deaths were among those over 80; the median age of Italy’s pandemic dead currently hovers over 80 after spiking to 85 last summer.

“We are here to promise our elderly that it will never happen again that fragile people are not adequately helped and protected. Only like this will we respect those who have left us,” Draghi said on the anniversar­y of the first army convoy carrying the virus dead from Bergamo.

Italy can hope to see its future by looking to Britain, the first country in Europe to authorize widespread vaccinatio­ns. More than 38% of the U.K. population has been inoculated since early December, starting with those over 70, health care workers and staff of care homes.

Britain, which leads Europe in virus deaths, has seen the percentage of fatalities among those over 75 diminish from 75% of the total before the vaccinatio­n campaign to 64% in the week ending March 5. Deaths across Britain have dropped from an average of 128 a day in the most recent seven-day period, from a high of 1,248 in the week ended Jan. 20 — also thanks to lockdown measures.

Along with health care workers, Spain, France and Italy prioritize­d vaccinatin­g residents of nursing homes, by far the single hardesthit population in the spring surge. They account for nearly a third of the dead in Italy’s first wave, and a third of France’s pandemic death toll of nearly 91,100.

 ?? ANTONIO CALANNI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dr. Luca Lorini, head of intensive care at the hospital named for the mid20th Century pope Papa Giovanni XXIII, in Bergamo, Italy, Thursday.
ANTONIO CALANNI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dr. Luca Lorini, head of intensive care at the hospital named for the mid20th Century pope Papa Giovanni XXIII, in Bergamo, Italy, Thursday.

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