Gulf News

The Views: Is Italy doing enough to contain virus

The first Western nation to deal with the virus is living in a strange, suspended time

- BY BEPPE SEVERGNINI ■ Beppe Severgnini is a noted Italian journalist, essayist and columnist.

Agreat many Italians seem to be confused. Most of us don’t know what to think. Mood swings are obvious around any dinner table. Is coronaviru­s just a nasty flu, and we are overreacti­ng? Or are we facing a serious epidemic and there are plenty of reasons to be worried?

On Friday I met with friends who run a charming hotel on the hills near Parma; all the bookings from abroad have been cancelled. I drove two of my friends to Linate Airport the next day. Autostrada del Sole and Milan’s beltway, always busy, looked like highways in Utah: almost empty. So did the city airport.

In conversati­ons, scary jokes mix with half-digested scientific data. Virologist­s — who try to explain what is going on and, more important, what to expect — have become household names. Sometimes they quarrel with one another, adding confusion to the mix.

So Italians are muddled and scared, no wonder. The news media talk about nothing else, and add alarming images to make their point. We see more masks on TV and online than on the streets of Milan — halfdesert­ed streets, with many people staying home. Schools and markets are closed, and many events cancelled. The mayor, Beppe Sala, is trying to spur a reaction; a video labelled #Milanonons­iferma (Milan Doesn’t Stop) went viral. But it’s going to be a struggle. Many countries are restrictin­g travel to and from Italy, leaving a feeling of isolation that feeds unease.

A vulnerable country

The numbers of the infected are small, compared to China, where the coronaviru­s started. In Italy, as of Sunday, 1,694 people had tested positive to the new virus. More than half live in Lombardy, and about 270 each in Veneto and Emilia-Romagna. Fortyone have died; their average age is around 80. Six hundred and forty are hospitalis­ed. One hundred and forty are in intensive care. Eighty-three have recovered. Most have shown mild symptoms or none, which makes it more difficult to detect who is infected.

Nonetheles­s, Northern ltaly was the first place in Europe to spot a sizeable outbreak. What can we learn from that?

Italy’s lifestyle is closer to the rest of Europe’s than those of China or South Korea, which were the first countries to be affected by the virus. Population numbers, density and distances to travel differ as well, as do social norms and health care. How can Italy’s National Health Service — widely considered among the world’s best — cope with a potentiall­y enormous number of patients? As of now, the threat has not materialis­ed. To be sure, hospitals in Cremona and Lodi, where many patients are under intensive care, say they can’t take any more. But that is not the norm, as the country strains to avoid having too many people falling sick at the same time.

The first person in Italy known to have contracted coronaviru­s was diagnosed by the local hospital, and the government in Rome — together with Lombardy’s, Veneto’s and Emilia- Romagna’s regional authority — decreed exceptiona­l measures to stop the epidemic from spreading: Schools are closed and will stay so for another week. So are markets, cinemas, theatres, churches and museums. Football matches have been cancelled. Design Week, which attracts visitors to Milan from around the world, has been postponed from April to June. Public transport is half empty.

But drastic measures without clear explanatio­ns have scared the nation. It would be wise to say, over and over, that it is crucial to limit the number of people who can pick up the virus from an infected person; and to do that, for a time, you will have to keep people apart. Moreover, the Italian health system has broadened its testing beyond only people with symptoms who have been in contact with infected coronaviru­s subjects. As of Sunday, Italy had tested about 20,000 people, many more than France or Germany. So it is hardly surprising that Italy is registerin­g more positive cases.

Of course, confusion reigns when a new situation arises, but the last ten days have already transforme­d Italy into an intriguing political, commercial, social, and psychologi­cal laboratory. The first Western country to deal with coronaviru­s en masse has also spotlighte­d how sensitive democracie­s are, even in developed states: their inappropri­ate initial reaction toward China, a crucial trade partner; the failure to gauge the economic impact; the reluctance of many companies to adopt smart working practices; the lack of solidarity within national borders. Also, the sudden pressure on the National Health Service. And above all, the personal vulnerabil­ity shown by many. This is the first epidemic to land on social media, where people can warn, but also scare, one another.

Italy is living in a strange, suspended time. Milan, its most energetic city, seems anxious to get back to business as usual, but that won’t be quick, nor easy. The country holds its breath and waits.

It is crucial to limit the number of people who can pick up the virus from an infected person; and to do that, for a time, you will have to keep people apart.

 ?? Seyyed de la Llata/ © Gulf News ??
Seyyed de la Llata/ © Gulf News

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates