As coronavirus cases surge in the biggest infectious disease crisis to hit European hospitals in a century, officials and health-care workers are scrambling to keep national health systems above water.
The grim harbinger of how bad things could get lies right in Europe’s midst, as Italy’s death toll leaps by hundreds each day. Doctors there are struggling to keep more than 2, 1024 people in intensive care alive, an effort that requires staff, beds and a constant supply of protective equipment.
) But countries are competing against one another for medical supplies on an international market that has been sucked dry. To address shortages, Spanish clothes manufacturers are turning their lines to making medical masks, and Parisian perfumers are producing hand sanitizer in an effort that harks back to wartime .
As the number of critically ill rises, analysts expect even the continent’s best prepared health systems to be stretched to their limits.
) “There’s been nothing on this scale in the postwar period,” said Martin McKee, a professor of European public health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. “The problem is that health systems, we talk about them as adaptive, but they have the capacity to fall over. They can expand so much, but at some point, the whole thing collapses. ”
Some countries began preparations earlier than others, but by now, the scale of the crisis has set in across the continent. In Britain, which was particularly slow to act, government pronouncements are now accompanied by a palpable sense of panic and ever more desperate appeals. The mood in France has shifted from an initial nonchalance to heightened anxiety, as President Emmanuel Macron has imposed an strict strict lockdown period of days, which officials have suggested may be extended.
Spain, which has suffered Europe’s second-worst outbreak after Italy, opened a coronavirus hospital in a – room hotel last week. Authorities say they expect to convert as many as 4, 06 hotel beds to hospital beds and add 5, 695 more in a convention center.
In the race to respond to the virus, countries in Europe do not begin on an even footing. Germany has 6 acute care beds per 1, people, according to Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development data, nearly three times as many as in Britain , with about 2.1. France has 3.1, according to the OECD; Spain has 2.4.
medical equipment. An Italian doctor who died after developing covid – , the disease the virus causes, said in a television interview That doctors in his hospital had to work without gloves.
A glance at public tenders is a window into the desperation. The French Interior Ministry is offering million euros for 1.5 million liters of hand-sanitizing gel, one tender shows. Italy’s region of Veneto, one of the first struck by the coronavirus, wants , liters of the coveted liquid, , 10 testing swabs and a half-million face masks. Luxembourg is looking for , respiratory masks with “extreme urgency.”
Wartime-like efforts to make up shortages have brought surges in national solidarity. But the panic over the coronavirus also, initially at least, brought an air of everyone for themselves to the continent.
Italy has complained that its European brethren have been slow to step in to Assist, forcing it to turn to China instead.
“Italy needs tens of millions of face masks,” Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio said.
“One-hundred-million face masks will be arriving from China,” he said. “Should other countries want to help us out in this war, they’re welcome to. Our country is on the front lines. ”
Central European and Balkan states have also turned to Beijing for help, and on Saturday, Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic listed his appreciation.
“Thank you very much to my brother, President Xi Jinping, the Communist Party of China and the Chinese people. Long live our steel friendship! ” he wrote.
Elias Mossialos, head of the Department of Health Policy at the London School of Economics, predicted the number of countries “knocking on China’s door” will give Beijing’s soft power a boost.
“There is no European solidarity,” he said.
In an effort to build some, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen last week announced a common European medical reserve that will include a stockpile of ventilators, protective equipment and other items. She had criticized earlier bans on medical exports from France and Germany.
In a glimmer of European collaboration, hospitals in France’s Alsace region have begun transferring some critically ill patients across the border to Germany , where the state of Baden-Württemberg offered assistance.
Whatever the preparations in hospitals, analysts say, a key in how well health services cope will be how effectively earlier measures on distancing and containment have been in “flattening the curve,” or slowing the spread of infection to avoid overwhelming the systems. There are early indications that levels of intensive care admissions in Germany will be lower than in Italy, Busse of the Berlin University of Technology said, but data is incomplete and affected by varying levels of testing.
Germany, where the death rate is notably lower than elsewhere, could be seeing the benefit of tracking and containing its early clusters, epidemiologists say. But it was slower than some countries to ban mass events and has refrained from a total lockdown. On Sunday, it limited nonfamily social gatherings to two people.
Health authorities in Austria, which enacted tighter restrictions earlier, said they were beginning to see the impact as the growth rate of new infections in the country slows. Britain, meanwhile, has held back from implementing the stricter measures seen elsewhere.
“The question is now, is it too late for the U.K.?” Mossialos said. “Now they are panicking, big time.”
A group of British scientists reported that it would take just 2.5 percent of the British population to be infected to cause a bed shortage in most counties. If infections reach percent, the group said, the country would see “ hospital deserts .”
One Spanish doctor, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he did not have permission to talk to the media, lamented that his country had wasted valuable time. He said his hospital now looked like a “wartime clinic.”
“It seems we didn’t learn very much from what happened in China or Italy,” he said.
Morris and Beck reported from Berlin. Booth reported from London. Pamela Rolfe in Madrid, James McCauley in Paris, Stefano Pitrelli in Rome, Karla Adam in London and Quentin Aries in Brussels contributed to this report.
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