South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Central Europe hit with ‘terrifying’ shortages

- By Karel Janicek and Vanessa Gera PETRDAVID JOSEK/AP

KYJOV, Czech Republic — Soldiers in Poland are giving coronaviru­s tests. American National Guard troops with medical training are headed to the Czech Republic to work alongside doctors there. A Czech university student is running blood samples to labs, and the mayor of the capital is taking shifts at a hospital.

With cases surging in many Central European countries, firefighte­rs, students and retired doctors are being asked to help shore up buckling health care systems.

“This is actually terrifying,” Dr. Piotr Suwalski, head of the cardiac surgery ward at a Polish hospital said on a day when daily COVID-19 cases rose 20% nationwide. “I think if we continue to gain 20% a day, no system can withstand it.”

Even before the pandemic, many countries in the region faced a shortage of medical personnel due to years of underfundi­ng in their public health sectors and an exodus of doctors and nurses to better paying jobs in Western Europe after the nations joined the European Union in 2004. Now, with the virus ripping through their hospitals, many health workers have been sickened, compoundin­g the shortfall.

More than 13,200 medical personnel across the Czech Republic have been infected, including 6,000 nurses and 2,600 doctors, according to the doctors’ union.

It’s not just clinicians these countries need.

Both Poland and the Czech Republic are building field hospitals as beds filluponwa­rds, andauthori­ties say there are only 12 ventilator­s left in all hospitals taking COVID-19 patients in the region around Warsaw, the Polish capital.

This may sound familiar, but not for these countries.

Health care workers transfer a COVID-19 patient Oct. 22 from a hospital in Kyjov to a hospital in Brno, Czech Republic.

Many in the region imposed tough restrictio­ns in the spring — including sealing borders and closing schools, stores and restaurant­s — and saw low infection rates even as the virus killed tens of thousands in Western Europe.

But now many Central European countries are seeing an onslaught similar to the one their western neighbors experience­d — and the same direwarnin­gs.

As he announced new restrictio­ns last week, Czech Prime Minister An

drej Babis put a date on when his country’s health system would collapse, if the new regulation­s were not imposed to slow the virus’s spread: between Nov. 7 and 11.

With one of the highest infection rates in Europe, the Czech Republic’s hospitals are desperatel­y looking for volunteers. The government is deploying thousands of medical students to hospitals and other students to testing sites.

In the capital of Prague, Mayor Zdenek Hrib, who has a degree in medicine, volunteere­d to help do initial exams of possible coronaviru­s patients at a university hospital. Soon, 28 medical personnel fromNation­al Guard units in Nebraska and Texas are expected to arrive tohelp treat patients at Prague’smilitary hospital and a new field hospital at the city’s exhib

ition ground.

Croatia has asked former doctors to come out of retirement to help in hospitals, while Slovenia has put retired physicians and current medical students on standby in case its situation deteriorat­es.

Poland, meanwhile, is mobilizing soldiers to conduct testing, so medical profession­als can focus on helping patients, as Warsaw’s National Stadium and other spaces are being transforme­d into field hospitals. Three times this week, the country reported new records in daily infections, and Thursday it also announced a record number of daily deaths— 301.

In Poland, deaths among people with cancer and other illnesses are also rising because doctors and nurses simply cannot keep up with their care, said Suwalski, the head of the

cardiac surgery ward at the Interior Ministry Hospital in Warsaw, the capital’s main coronaviru­s hospital.

“The numbers of victims of thispandem­ic are not just the patients dying directly from COVID-19,” Suwalski said. “There are also (patients) who die because of the change of conditions, and even the collapse of the medical system.”

The problem is felt especially keenly in small-town hospitals that don’t have the resources of university medical centers, such as the one inKyjov, a southeaste­rn Czech town of 11,000.

Thedirecto­r of thehospita­l there, Lubomir Wenzl, says staffing became critical in October as the number of

COVID-19 patients doubled over three weeks to almost

60, and 75 of the medical staff fell ill.

He appealed for volunteers on social media and got so many offers that the hospital could pick who it needed. Mostly, the hospital chose people who have some medical training. They keep a roster of others they can call if they need them.

“I have healthy hands and legs, and this is something as a firefighte­r I can do,” said Antonin Kuchar, the deputy mayor and a volunteer firefighte­r who has helped move patients around the hospital.

Vojtech Coufal, a mechanical engineerin­g student at a university in Brno, also answered the call. The

20-year-old has first-aid training and was couriering blood samples around the hospital campus.

While the volunteers’ help is vital, their roles are limited, said Dr. Jiri Vyhnal, chief of the intensive care unit in Kyjov that treats

COVID-19 patients in serious condition.

“It’s impossible to replace those doctors by anyone else, because you need a long timeto gain experience to become a good intensive care specialist,” Vyhnal said. “The problem is that a small group of doctors and nurses will have to take care of a high number of patients treated with lung ventilatio­n.”

As the number of coronaviru­s patients rises, the hospital has closed several wards: ones for ear, nose and throat, neurology, rehabilita­tion and orthopedic­s.

“We have been forced to stop doing planned operations, but we have to go on with urgent ones,” Wenzl said.

The intensive care ward, meanwhile, has 11 patients and can accept up to 18, Vyhnal said.

He said he and his staff are ready to work on their days off “to prevent an Italian scenario,“referring to how hospitals there became overwhelme­d.

“We will do everything,” he said. “But of, course, we are afraid, who wouldn’t be?”

“We will do everything. But, of course, we are afraid, who wouldn’t be?”

Dr. Jiri Vyhnal

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States