From Reuters:
“Italy
extends lockdowns to more regions, tightens curbs”
Restrictions
aimed at slowing a surge in coronavirus cases will be extended in various
Italian regions, with both Tuscany and Campania set to be designated as
high-risk “red zones”, the health ministry said on Friday. Italy registered a
record 40,902 new coronavirus infections over the previous 24 hours, bringing
the total since the disease came to light in February to 1.107 million - a
threefold increase in barely a month. Looking to limit the spread, the
government last week created a three-tier system, with varying degrees of curbs
in each area, initially placing four regions in a red zone, two in an orange
zone and the rest in a moderate-risk yellow zone. It tweaked the zoning at the
start of this week and revised it again on Friday after reviewing the latest
data, including local infection rates and hospital occupancy. Tuscany and Campania will be added on Sunday
to the red list, joining the wealthy northern regions of Lombardy, Piedmont and
Valle D’Aosta, the province of Bolzano and Calabria in the toe of Italy. People
living in these areas are only allowed to leave their homes for work, health
reasons or emergencies. Bars, restaurants and most shops must remain closed.
Nine regions
will now sit in the intermediary orange zone - Emilia-Romagna, Friuli, Marche,
Abruzzo, Basilicata, Liguria, Puglia, Sicily and Umbria. Just five remain in
the yellow zone, including Lazio, centred on Rome, and Veneto. Campania has
jumped straight from the yellow to red zone after medics warned that the health
system there was close to collapse, with huge queues building outside hospitals
and some patients put on oxygen in their cars as they awaited admission. But
even in the north, officials have warned that hospitals are struggling to cope
as the number of coronavirus sufferers climbs ever higher and staff battle
exhaustion. “We had just four cases here in Lombardy in August. Now we have
more than 800 (intensive care) beds occupied by COVID-positive patients,” said
Enrico Storti, director of the intensive care unit in a hospital in the
northern town of Lodi. “We now know what to do, we are now for sure better
prepared compared with the first wave ... but we are also tired and it is not
easy to find the same energy, to find the same strength that we were able to
use in the first hit,” he told Reuters.
^ Sadly, this
is not surprising. ^
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