The Maui News

Milan hospitals under pressure again amid virus resurgence

- By COLLEEN BARRY

MILAN — Coronaviru­s infections are surging again in the region of northern Italy where the pandemic first took hold in Europe, renewing pressure on hospitals and health care workers.

At Milan’s San Paolo Hospital, a ward dedicated to COVID-19 patients and outfitted with breathing machines reopened over the weekend, a sign that the city and the surroundin­g Lombardy region is entering another emergency phase of the pandemic.

The region was the hardest hit area of Italy in the spring, when Italy spent weeks with the world’s highest reported virus-related death toll before being overtaken by the United States. For the medical personnel in Lombardy who fought the virus the first time around, the long-predicted rebound came too soon.

“On a psychologi­cal level, I have to say I still have not recovered,’’ said nurse Cristina Settembres­e, referring to the period in March and April when the region accounted for onethird of Italy’s confirmed cornavirus cases and nearly half of Italy’s COVID-19 deaths.

“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 strictest lockdowns, the country on Wednesday posted its highest daily number of new cases with 7,332 — surpassing the previous high of 6,557 that was recorded during the virus’s most deadly phase in March.

Lombardy is again leading the nation in case numbers, an echo of the traumatic spring months when ambulance sirens pierced the silence of stilled cities.

The Italian government is eager to avoid another nationwide lockdown to protect the country’s economy but has not ruled out closing cities or provinces.

Increased testing is partially responsibl­e for the latest round of high case numbers, and many of the individual­s who have tested positive are asymptomat­ic. So far, Italy’s daily COVID-19 mortality figures remain significan­tly below the spring heights, hovering around 40 in recent days. That compares with the high of 969 dead reported on one day in late March.

In response to the current outbreak, Premier Giuseppe Conte’s government tightened nationwide restrictio­ns twice inside a week. Starting today, Italians are prohibited from playing 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 quickly 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 in confirmed virus cases. French President Emmanuel Macron announced Wednesday that 18 million people living in nine regions of France, including in Paris, will have a curfew starting Saturday through Dec. 1 in an effort to curb new infections.

Macron also reinstated a nationwide state of health emergency that had ended three months ago. France has a total of 798,000 confirmed cases and nearly 33,000 deaths, while COVID-19 patients occupy a third of intensive care unit beds nationwide.

Italy so far 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.

 ?? AP photo ?? People wear face masks to prevent the spread of COVID19 as they travel in a subway train, in Milan, Italy, on Wednesday. Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte says the aim of Italy’s new anti-virus restrictio­ns limiting nightlife and socializin­g is to head off another generalize­d lockdown.
AP photo People wear face masks to prevent the spread of COVID19 as they travel in a subway train, in Milan, Italy, on Wednesday. Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte says the aim of Italy’s new anti-virus restrictio­ns limiting nightlife and socializin­g is to head off another generalize­d lockdown.

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