Jamaica Gleaner

Central Europe’s hospitals slammed, can’t treat all in need

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POLAND RECORDED its highest daily number of new coronaviru­s infections on Wednesday as hospitals buckle under a new surge. Hungary has the highest per capita death rate in the world. And Romanian doctors are working around the clock and having to decide who does – and doesn’t – get a bed in an intensive care unit (ICU).

The coronaviru­s pandemic is unleashing enormous suffering as infection rates rise across central Europe, even as the Czech Republic and Slovakia – recently among the worst-hit areas in the world – are finally seeing some improvemen­ts following tight lockdowns.

In Poland, officials say this “third wave”of the pandemic is driven by

the highly contagious virus variant first detected in Britain, which now makes up most of the new cases. The country’s vaccine roll-out is happening far too slowly to hold back this powerful wave of illness

and deaths.

With 38 million people, Poland announced 575 new deaths on Wednesday and nearly 30,000 new infections – surpassing a record for new cases set in November.

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, warning that the worst is yet to come, said the country will have even stricter restrictio­ns for a two-week period before and after Easter. This comes with the country already in a nationwide lockdown that has closed non-essential shops and sent all schoolchil­dren into remote learning.

Poland’s healthcare system is under greater pressure now than at any time in the pandemic. Polish media this week have reported on hospitals so overwhelme­d that they are forced to put extra beds in corridors. Maternity wards have been suddenly turned into COVID-19 wards, forcing women to change plans for where they will be giving birth. At least one hospital director has banned staff from taking vacations.

 ?? AP ?? Polish commuters stand in a line and wait for a coronaviru­s test at the Stadtbruec­ke border crossing between Germany and Poland in Frankfurt an der Oder, Germany, on Monday, March, 22. Poland is being classified as a ‘high-risk’ COVID-19 area by German authoritie­s, and people crossing into Germany from Poland must provide a negative coronaviru­s test.
AP Polish commuters stand in a line and wait for a coronaviru­s test at the Stadtbruec­ke border crossing between Germany and Poland in Frankfurt an der Oder, Germany, on Monday, March, 22. Poland is being classified as a ‘high-risk’ COVID-19 area by German authoritie­s, and people crossing into Germany from Poland must provide a negative coronaviru­s test.

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