The Mercury News

Nations try to control European virus surge

- By Rafal Niedzielsk­i and Angela Charlton

European countries scrambled Monday to tamp down a surge in COVID-19 cases and ramp up vaccinatio­ns, hoping to spare hospitals from becoming overwhelme­d by the pandemic’s latest deadly wave of infections.

The crush of coronaviru­s patients has been relentless for hospitals in Poland, where daily new infections hit records of over 35,000 on two recent days and the government ordered new restrictio­ns to prevent large gatherings over the long Easter weekend. France’s health minister warned that the number of intensive care unit patients could match levels from a year ago.

But in a sign of the disparitie­s from one country to the next, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced that barbers, gyms and outdoor bar and restaurant patios would be able to open next week after the country reported progress with vaccines and its recent lockdown. Meanwhile, the U.S. vaccinatio­n campaign kept accelerati­ng, with 40% of the nation’s adult population receiving at least one dose.

On Sunday, coronaviru­s patients filled almost all of the 120 beds at the County Hospital of Bochnia, 25 miles east of Krakow, Poland. One patient, 82-yearold Edward Szumanski, voiced concern that some people still refuse to see the virus that has killed over 2.8 million people worldwide as a threat. About 55,000 of those deaths have occurred in Poland.

“The disease is certainly there, and it is very serious. Those who have not been through it, those who do not have it in their family, may be deluding themselves, but the reality is different,” he said.

The more contagious and more aggressive virus variant identified in Britain is fueling much of the increase in Europe. Meanwhile, voters in many countries are angry at the European Union’s strategy but also at their own government­s’ handling of the pandemic and the failure to prevent repeated spikes in infections.

France’s health minister, Olivier Veran, warned Monday that the number of COVID-19 patients in the country’s intensive care units might match the level of the first crisis a year ago. Speaking on TF1 television, he said the country could approach the ICU saturation levels of April 2020, when French ICUs held more than 7,000 virus patients.

 ?? EFRAM LUKATSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Policemen check the passenger passes at a subway station entrance in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Monday. Authoritie­s in Kyiv recently introduced tighter virus lockdown restrictio­ns.
EFRAM LUKATSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Policemen check the passenger passes at a subway station entrance in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Monday. Authoritie­s in Kyiv recently introduced tighter virus lockdown restrictio­ns.

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