Santa Fe New Mexican

Italian deaths rise:

Fatalities in European nation eclipse casualties in China

- By Nicole Winfield and Tim Sullivan

Italy’s death toll from the coronaviru­s outbreak eclipsed China’s on Thursday as the scourge extended its march across the West, where the United States and other countries increasing­ly enlisted the military and improvised at every turn to get ready for the onslaught of patients.

In the U.S., the Army readied mobile military hospitals for deployment in major cities. In Madrid, a four-star hotel was turned into a hospital. Medical centers around the United States set up drive-thru testing sites that drew long lines of motorists waiting for nurses to swab their nostrils.

As the outbreak spread westward, it infected at least one European head of state: Monaco’s 62-year-old Prince Albert II, who continued to work from his office. And it appeared to be opening an alarming new front in Africa, where health care in many countries is already in sorry shape.

At the United Nations in New York, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the world is “at war with a virus” and warned that “a global recession, perhaps of record dimensions, is a near certainty.”

“If we let the virus spread like wildfire — especially in the most vulnerable regions of the world — it would kill millions of people,” he said.

Italy, with 60 million citizens, recorded a total of at least 3,405 deaths, or roughly 150 more than in China — a country with a population over 20 times larger. At the same time Italy reached its bleak milestone, Wuhan, the Chinese city where the coronaviru­s first emerged three months ago, recorded no new infections, a sign that the communist country’s draconian lockdowns had worked.

In a measure of how the fortunes of East and West have shifted, New York officials were sent to China to buy more ventilator­s. And in Italy, the leader of a delegation from the Chinese Red Cross openly castigated Italians for failing to take the country’s national lockdown seriously.

On a visit to the hard-hit city of Milan, Sun Shuopeng said he was shocked to see so many people walking around, using public transporta­tion and eating out in hotels.

“Right now we need to stop all economic activity and we need to stop the mobility of people,” he said. “All people should be staying at home in quarantine.”

In the U.S., the damage to the world’s largest economy kept piling up, with the number of Americans filing for unemployme­nt benefits surging by 70,000 last week. On Wall Street, though, stocks rose modestly amid optimism over efforts by the Federal Reserve and other central banks to shore up the economy. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained almost 200 points, or 1 percent.

Congress is weighing a proposed $1 trillion emergency package that would dispense relief checks to households in as many as two rounds, the first of which would consist of payments of $1,000 per adult and $500 for each child. The U.S. death toll rose to 168, primarily elderly people. Johns Hopkins University, which has been tallying the virus’ spread around the world, said the U.S. had more than 11,000 cases. Worldwide the death toll crept toward 10,000 and the total number of infections topped 220,000, including nearly 85,000 people who have recovered.

French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe pleaded with people to keep their distance from one another to avoid spreading the virus, even as the crisis pushed them to seek comfort.

“When you love someone, you should avoid taking them in your arms,” he said in Parliament.

Health authoritie­s have cited a variety of reasons for Italy’s high toll, key among them its large population of elderly people, who are particular­ly susceptibl­e to serious complicati­ons from the virus. Italy has the world’s second-oldest population, and the vast majority of its dead — 87 percent — were over 70.

Jonas Schmidt-Chanasit, a virologist at Germany’s Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine, said Italy’s high death rate could be explained in part by the almost total breakdown of the health system in the hardhit northern part of the country.

In the U.S., Army officials announced plans to deploy two hospitals, probably to Seattle and New York City. President Donald Trump said earlier this week that he would send a Navy hospital ship to the West Coast as well as one to New York City. With more than 4,000 cases, far more than any other state, New York is rapidly becoming a U.S. epicenter of the pandemic.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said the state does not have enough ventilator­s for the expected surge of patients and needs to acquire thousands before the outbreak overwhelms hospitals.

“Every state is shopping for ventilator­s. We’re shopping for ventilator­s. We literally have people in China shopping for ventilator­s which is one of the largest manufactur­ers. So this is a major problem,” he said.

A Houston hospital that opened its doors to drive-thru testing quickly saw a line of hundreds of vehicles back up for more than a mile. At a white tent, workers in masks and head-to-toe protective gear swabbed motorists. Petra Sanchez waited to find out whether she had the virus.

“I have an 80-year-old dad, and I haven’t been around him for the same reason,” she said. ”I don’t know what I have.”

On Thursday, the U.S. State Department warned Americans in the strongest terms yet not to travel abroad under any circumstan­ces.

 ?? CLAUDIO FURLAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Medical personnel work Thursday in the intensive care unit of a hospital in Brescia, Italy.
CLAUDIO FURLAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Medical personnel work Thursday in the intensive care unit of a hospital in Brescia, Italy.

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