The Star Late Edition

Doctors demand support

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NURSES and doctors demanded action after Spain reported its sharpest daily increase in coronaviru­s cases and said about 14% of the nearly 40 000 infections were among health workers.

Nursing union SATSE said Madrid’s hospitals were on “the verge of collapse” and needed urgent support, while a doctors’ union said it had filed a lawsuit demanding protective equipment within 24 hours. The capital’s Palacio de Hielo mall, home to an Olympic-sized ice rink, began operating as a makeshift mortuary after authoritie­s said facilities were unable to cope. The health ministry reported around 6 600 new cases and 500 deaths overnight. Spain is Europe’s worst-hit country after Italy and has recorded 2 696 deaths.

Health emergency chief Fernando Simon attributed the nearly 14% infection rate among medical staff to limited availabili­ty of protective equipment and several early clusters of the virus occurring in hospitals.

He said pressure on intensive-care units would continue even after transmissi­on of the virus among the general population had peaked.

Madrid’s AMYTS doctors’ union said it had filed a lawsuit to force the regional health authority to deliver scrubs, masks and goggles to hospitals and other health centres. A spokesman for the authority declined to comment.

Meanwhile, the government approved a burden-sharing scheme to help banks cope with loan non-payments as a result of the crisis. The state guaranteed around 80% of unpaid loans owed by small- to medium-sized companies and self-employed workers, and released an initial tranche of €20 billion (R377bn). The measures are part of an unpreceden­ted €200bn package approved last week to help companies and workers cope with mass stoppages.

Prosecutor­s in Catalonia opened an investigat­ion into two nursing homes, the prosecutor general’s office said, after at least 13 residents died of the virus at a home in Capellades and nine more at a home in Olesa de Montserrat. Olesa’s local government warned of a critical situation due to a lack of staff.

Military units dispatched to help care homes comply with sanitary regulation­s disinfecte­d 179 facilities on Monday and cleaned another 96 yesterday, officials said. | Reuters

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