The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Surviving coronaviru­s through vigilance in Italy.

- By Carol Leonetti Dannhauser CONN. HEALTH I-TEAM WRITER vita. la dolce paesani’s Carol Leonetti Dannhauser is a freelance journalist whose paternal grandparen­ts were born in Castel Morrone. Her grandfathe­r and Joann’s grandmothe­r were siblings. Dannhause

Joann Rubino brought her cellphone outside to the balcony and swept the camera around for a neighborho­od panorama. The sky blazed a brilliant blue, the apartment buildings an unmistakab­le burnt sienna.

But there wasn’t a soul in sight. “It’s a beautiful spring day, but I’m not leaving the house,” Rubino, 63, said via Facebook from her Italian home.

On a typical day in Castel Morrone, a town of about 3,500 people an hour’s drive from Naples, Rubino might be strolling the streets, dropping in on friends and family, stopping at a bar for a coffee or at a pizzeria—living

But these aren’t typical days in Italy. The coronaviru­s has infected more than 75,000 Italians—and claimed over 7,500 lives—the most in the world, according to the World Health Organizati­on. Cases in the U.S. have surpassed Italy with over 86,000 reported; and more than 1,270 deaths.

Italy reported its first case of COVID-19 on Feb. 20. Three days later, the government quarantine­d a dozen towns. Now, the entire country of 60 million people is on lockdown.

“At the end of February, they started to say there’s a problem. Like everyone else, I was thinking the problem’s up there, near Milan. Then they started counting the sick: one person, 20 persons, 30 persons, 25,000. I don’t even know how many there are now,” said Rubino, a former New Havener who moved to Italy with her parents back in 1979.

Every day, she notes the casualties: 440 deaths one day, 647 the next and then 743. She watches on TV as the sick line up in overcrowde­d tents outside of overcrowde­d hospitals, where doctors decide who gets a bed and a respirator in the intensive care unit and who goes without.

So far, Castel Morrone has been spared. Rubino attributes this to her

[fellow villagers] vigilance. In her little town, only three people at a time are allowed in the grocery store, the bakery, the pharmacy, the meat market. All the restaurant­s are closed, and there’s no takeout. The Red Cross delivers groceries to shut-ins.

The mayor sends out videos. A recent one: Close your windows and doors for street sanitizing from 9 p.m. to midnight. The police stop passersby, demanding to know why they are out. Joggers are fined for endangerin­g their neighbors. Do it twice and face prison time.

Rubino can walk her dogs, but only within 100 meters of her house, and then she dashes back to the home she shares with her partner, Vito Giordani, and two of their children. Other family members live a short walk away, but in-person visits are forbidden. The family recently celebrated Father’s Day, March 19, via video chat. Once a day Rubino calls her sister, who goes out on her own balcony to wave.

“I’ve never seen anything like this in my life,”

Joann Rubino on her balcony in Castel Morrone.

Rubino said. “It’s scary. It’s like wartime, only you don’t know where the enemy is or when he will strike.”

In Rome, A Race For Faster Tests

About 125 miles north of Castel Morrone, in Rome, Beniamino Savo drives to work on eerily empty Roman roads. Savo, 41, is a biomedical engineer and quality control manager for Israeli tech company BATM, which is racing the clock to develop an athome COVID-19 test kit.

As soon as Savo enters the medical manufactur­ing facility Adaltis, he dons an overcoat, gloves and mask — all sent from Israel, as

Italy’s supply has run dry. Every hour, the lab undergoes a deep clean.

When COVID-19 struck China, BATM obtained the virus’ molecular DNA sequence from Chinese colleagues. They identified the disease as a cousin to SARS and MERS, then joined with researcher­s from Rome’s Tor Vergata University to develop and manufactur­e a diagnostic kit. Savo and his colleagues were at work on the kit when he learned of the first cases in Italy.

“Nothing happened for two weeks, and it looked like everything was under control,” Savo said. “Then in a few days, everything happened. The trouble is, many are asymptomat­ic. They think they’re fine, but they are infecting others.”

 ?? Conn. Health I-Team / ??
Conn. Health I-Team /

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States