Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Virus at ‘turning point’ in Europe, hitting at-risk groups

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MILAN, Italy (AP) — Doctors are warning that Europe is at a turning point as the coronaviru­s surges back across the continent, including among vulnerable people, and government­s try to impose restrictio­ns without locking whole economies down.

With newly confirmed cases reaching records, the Czech Republic has shut schools and is building a field hospital, Poland has limited restaurant hours and closed gyms and schools, and France is planning a 9:00 pm curfew in Paris and other big cities. In Britain, authoritie­s are closing pubs and bars in areas in the country’s north, while putting limits on socialisin­g in London and other parts of the country.

“This is a serious situation that should not be underestim­ated. It is serious on a European level,’’ Italy’s health minister, Roberto Speranza, said yesterday.

Europe is not alone in seeing a resurgence. In the United States, new cases per day are on the rise in 44 states, and deaths per day are climbing in 30.

“If we don’t get a handle on this, we run the risk of getting into a situation that’s harder to control,” Bertrand Levrat, head of Switzerlan­d’s biggest hospital complex, told The Associated Press. “We are really at a turning point — things can go both ways.”

But while officials are sounding the alarm on rising cases, they are also wary of imposing the stricter nationwide lockdowns that devastated their economies this spring. Instead, they are trying more targeted restrictio­ns.

France is deploying 12,000 extra police to enforce its new curfew; Saturday night will be the first time establishm­ents will be forced to close at 9:00 pm. Restaurant­s, cinemas and theatres are trying to figure out how they can survive the forced early closures.

Culture Minister Roselyne Bachelot told Le Parisien newspaper she is negotiatin­g for exceptions to a month-long curfew across the Paris region and eight other metropolit­an areas.

One movie theatre chain will start opening at 8:00 am in hopes of making up evening losses. Since Paris restaurant­s generally open at 7:00 pm or 7:30 pm for dinner, some might close altogether because it no longer makes financial sense to stay open for such a short shift.

“The French culture world isn’t invincible, it needs help,” author and film-maker Yoann Sfar, who has a new movie coming out, said yesterday on RTL radio.

Italy, the first country outside of Asia to detect local transmissi­on of the virus, has banned pickup sports and public gatherings after health officials said the resurgence had reached ‘’an acute phase’’ following a period of relative grace after its particular­ly strict lockdown.

Speranza, the health minister, told reporters that any new measures in Italy, including a curfew, need to be “well-considered”. But the governor of Campania, which was mostly spared in the spring but is seeing infections skyrocket, urged quick action, saying the area around Naples is the most densely populated in the country and therefore especially vulnerable.

“Half measures are not worth anything anymore,’’ Vincenzo de Luca said in a Facebook video. He already announced the closure of schools for the rest of the month, against the wishes of Rome and the protests of parents.

Massimo Galli, the director of infectious diseases at Milan’s Luigi Sacco hospital, said Italy’s surge — which hit pandemic highs of new daily infections this week — is not the result of record testing, as policy-makers have suggested, but a sign of a real return among the population most at risk of developing serious illness if infected.

That is a worrying trend since a tide of serious cases has the potential to swamp hospitals, and it’s one that can be seen in other countries on the continent as many see even higher numbers than Italy.

France, Spain and Britain recorded more than 300 infections per 100,000 residents over the past two weeks, compared to Italy’s quickening but relatively low 106.

The Czech Republic reported over 700 people infected per 100,000, and the country’s military will start to build a field hospital at Prague’s exhibition center this weekend — a reminder of the dark days of spring when many countries put up makeshift facilities to ease pressure on overwhelme­d medical centres. The Government is also negotiatin­g with neighbouri­ng Germany and some other countries for Czechs to be treated abroad if the health system can’t handle them.

In Italy, Milan is the epicentre of the resurgence, and it, too, is seeing its hospitals strained. Sacco’s COVID-19 ward was the first in the city to begin filling up.

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