Bangkok Post

BRAZIL SETS NEW RECORDS

Covid toll knows no bounds

- ERNESTO LONDOÑO AND FLÁVIA MILHORANCE RIO DE JANEIRO

Brazilians were recovering from Carnival in the heady days of February last year when the first known carriers of the new coronaviru­s flew home from Europe, planting the seeds of catastroph­e. In Brazil, Latin America’s largest nation, the virus found remarkably fertile ground, turbocharg­ing the outbreak that has turned South America into the hardest-hit continent in the world. Brazil recently surpassed 500,000 official Covid-19 deaths, the world’s second-highest total behind the United States. About 1 in every 400 Brazilians has died from the virus, but many experts believe the true death toll may be higher. Home to just over 2.7% of the world’s population, Brazil accounts for nearly 13% of recorded fatalities, and the situation there is not easing.

President Jair Bolsonaro has led a strikingly lackadaisi­cal, dismissive and chaotic response to a coronaviru­s crisis that has left Brazil poorer, more unequal and increasing­ly polarised. Social distancing measures have been spotty and badly enforced, the president and his allies have promoted ineffectiv­e treatments, and for months the government failed to acquire a large number of vaccines.

“As a Brazilian, it’s appalling to see the throwback following three decades of health achievemen­ts happening so fast, with devastatin­g consequenc­es,” said Marcia Castro, chair of the Department of Global Health and Population at Harvard University.

As the virus began spreading from large cities to remote corners of Brazil last year, it took an especially high toll in the Amazon region. By January, patients in the state of Amazonas were suffocatin­g to death

after the government was late to heed warnings about oxygen shortages.

Now as the country struggles to vaccinate people, the region’s isolated villages, deep in the rainforest and often accessible only by river, still present a unique challenge.

Mr Bolsonaro has told Brazilians repeatedly that they had nothing to fear. The social distancing, lockdowns and travel restrictio­ns that became the norm elsewhere were wild overreacti­ons that would devastate Brazil’s economy, he warned.

“In my particular case, given my history as an athlete, should I become infected, I would have nothing to worry about,” Mr Bolsonaro said in March last year. “I wouldn’t feel a thing, or at most, it would be a measly cold, a little flu.” (He later tested positive for the virus and appeared to have only mild symptoms.)

That cavalier attitude alarmed doctors in Brazil, which has a solid track record of finding innovative solutions to vexing health problems.

Mr Bolsonaro fired his first health minister in April of last year, after their disagreeme­nts over virus containmen­t became public. The next minister lasted barely a month, unwilling to abide by Mr Bolsonaro’s effusive endorsemen­t of hydroxychl­oroquine, an anti-malaria pill that has not been shown to effectivel­y treat Covid-19.

Then the president put Eduardo Pazuello, an army general with no background in health care, in charge of the ministry. He has been faulted by lawmakers for allowing the outbreak to spiral out of control this year, pushing the health care system to the point of collapse.

Even after all the hard lessons that have been learned and adjustment­s that have been made, hospitals in cities like Campo Grande, in the hard-hit western state of Mato Grosso do Sul, are overwhelme­d.

The pandemic abated late last year, worsened as the new year began and exploded in March and April. Brazil’s official death tally averaged fewer than 400 a day in early November but soared to more than 3,000 a day in early April — tragedy on a scale few would have predicted.

In recent weeks, the daily death toll has exceeded 2,000, and new cases are surging again.

Dealing with death has become routine for Maurício Antonio de Oliveira, 51, a supervisor at the Grupo Eden funeral home in Sao Paulo. But 15 months into the pandemic, he hasn’t gotten used to the particular viciousnes­s that Covid inflicts on families of the deceased.

Open coffin viewings are normal in Brazil, which allows the grieving to say a final farewell. But such funerals are prohibited for Covid victims.

“It’s very cruel because the person with Covid is hospitalis­ed and then you don’t see them any

In my particular case , given my history as an athlete, should I become infected, I would have nothing to worry about. JAIR BOLSONARO

BRAZILIAN PRESIDENT

more,” he said. “They want to see their loved one, but there’s no way.”

By April last year, many hospital intensive care units were overloaded, leaving families scrambling to secure beds, or even chairs, in packed emergency rooms.

Francis Albert Fujii, an emergency care physician in Sao Paulo who helps transport critically ill patients to hospitals, spent the early months of the pandemic cloistered in his apartment when he wasn’t working. Dr Fujii, 41, a divorced father of two, missed family milestones and went 1.5 years without seeing his mother.

The virus killed two of his co-workers, a fellow physician and a nurse.

“My biggest fear wasn’t even getting sick,” he said. “It was infecting someone.”

Things quieted down later in the year, but then the second wave hit, far worse than the first.

“We’ve been in this battle for 15 months and there’s no way out of the crisis,” he said. “I’m very sad about the situation we’re in. We need leadership that believes in the disease and takes the situation seriously.”

During recent congressio­nal hearings on the pandemic, a Pfizer executive said that last year officials ignored repeated offers from Pfizer to sell its Covid vaccine to Brazil.

The scarcity of vaccines has left governors, mayors and private sector leaders scrambling to strike their own deals with suppliers.

Mr Bolsonaro has expressed scepticism and at times ambivalenc­e about the importance of vaccines, once joking that vaccine makers would not be held responsibl­e if people who were inoculated turned into crocodiles.

“This has definitely been mismanaged,” said Carla Domingues, an epidemiolo­gist who ran Brazil’s national immunisati­on programme from 2011 to 2019. “We didn’t believe in the need for vaccinatio­n, and we didn’t even believe a second wave was coming.”

At the end of March, as deaths soared, only 7% of Brazilians had been at least partly vaccinated. The campaign has accelerate­d since then — about 30% of the population has had at least one dose — but it still has far to go.

Lawmakers in April formed a special committee to investigat­e the government’s response to the pandemic.

For several weeks, the panel has held televised hearings that have put Mr Bolsonaro’s government on the defensive.

Members of Congress have asked why the government mass produced and distribute­d hydroxychl­oroquine long after leading medical authoritie­s had warned against its use, and why it waited so long to start buying Covid vaccines.

The hearings have also aired suspicions that Mr Bolsonaro actually wanted to let the virus spread freely, to reach “herd immunity”, no matter the cost — although experts question whether that goal is even attainable. Critics have accused the president of choosing the economy over lives, without saving either one.

Growing political pressure has not led the government to correct course or take responsibi­lity for missteps. In fact, Mr Bolsonaro’s government has vigorously fought efforts to rein in transmissi­on, fighting, for instance, for the right of churches to hold services this year, even as hospitals were having to turn patients away.

Anger over the response has incited large demonstrat­ions. The rage of protesters is evident in the word used most often in posters and graffiti to denounce Mr Bolsonaro’s actions and inaction: genocide.

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 ?? PHOTOS: MAURICIO LIMA/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? MAIN PHOTO Open graves at Vila Formosa cemetery in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
PHOTOS: MAURICIO LIMA/THE NEW YORK TIMES MAIN PHOTO Open graves at Vila Formosa cemetery in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
 ??  ?? RIGHT Gravedigge­rs take a respite on a day when 34 out of 55 burials were Covid-19 victims at Vila Formosa, a cemetery in Sao Paulo.
RIGHT Gravedigge­rs take a respite on a day when 34 out of 55 burials were Covid-19 victims at Vila Formosa, a cemetery in Sao Paulo.
 ??  ?? A Covid-19 patient is transferre­d to an Air Force plane headed for a hospital bed in Sao Paulo because there are none left locally in Campo Grande, Brazil.
A Covid-19 patient is transferre­d to an Air Force plane headed for a hospital bed in Sao Paulo because there are none left locally in Campo Grande, Brazil.
 ??  ?? Health care workers with coronaviru­s vaccine visit communiite­s along the Manacapuru river in the Amazon region of northweste­rn Brazil.
Health care workers with coronaviru­s vaccine visit communiite­s along the Manacapuru river in the Amazon region of northweste­rn Brazil.
 ??  ?? A patient is intubated at an emergency care unit in Campo Grande.
A patient is intubated at an emergency care unit in Campo Grande.
 ?? PHOTOS: MAURICIO LIMA/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? ABOVE A factory that is producing nearly 500 coffins a day, in Cabrália Paulista, Brazil.
PHOTOS: MAURICIO LIMA/THE NEW YORK TIMES ABOVE A factory that is producing nearly 500 coffins a day, in Cabrália Paulista, Brazil.
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A woman who lives by the Manacapuru river receives a vaccinatio­n from a health care worker in the Amazon region of northweste­rn Brazil.
RIGHT A woman who lives by the Manacapuru river receives a vaccinatio­n from a health care worker in the Amazon region of northweste­rn Brazil.
 ??  ?? Residents line up for food baskets and hygiene kits that include masks and hand sanitiser in a low-income neighbourh­ood of Sao Paulo.
Residents line up for food baskets and hygiene kits that include masks and hand sanitiser in a low-income neighbourh­ood of Sao Paulo.
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 ??  ?? A health care team focused on helping vulnerable people who have contracted Covid-19 checks a homeless man’s vital signs in Sao Paulo.
A health care team focused on helping vulnerable people who have contracted Covid-19 checks a homeless man’s vital signs in Sao Paulo.
 ??  ?? Prayer during a service at the Fullness of the Throne of God Apostolic Church in Sao Paulo.
Prayer during a service at the Fullness of the Throne of God Apostolic Church in Sao Paulo.

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