Friday, 22 Nov 2024

Italy's vulnerable south rolls out virus battle plan

NAPLES, ITALY (AFP) – It’s a race against time at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, where a new intensive care unit is being assembled as southern Italy’s underfunded and overstretched healthcare system braces for an epidemic.

The rooms in “Building M” have been stripped out, with just the last few gurneys to be removed before new life-saving equipment, medicines and supplies can be installed in the freshly named “Coronavirus Wing”.

Italy is the hardest-hit country in Europe, with 827 fatalities and nearly 12,500 people infected by the virus.

Over 1,000 patients are in intensive care.

Most cases are in the Lombardy region in the country’s wealthy north, but virologists have warned the disease risks becoming an epidemic in the poorer south too.

The leak to the media on Saturday (March 7) of the imminent “lockdown” of a large area of the north as a containment measure sparked panic and prompted people to flee south overnight – potentially carrying the disease with them.

Many of those who initially stayed would later take advantage of government permission to return home.

Lombardy currently has 5,763 known cases, while Calabria at Italy’s southern tip has 17, and neighbouring region Basilicata has just eight.

But the fear is that is about to change. And with even Lombardy’s first-class health system creaking under the strain, the concern is hospitals in southern regions, desiccated by years of budget cuts, will be overwhelmed.

‘LESS PREPARED’

“The south is less prepared, and could pay a serious price for it,” Cardarelli’s director Giuseppe Longo, 63, told AFP.

“The state has asked us to get ready. We are employing hundreds of new doctors, nurses and medical staff,” he said.

Of the 5,400 or so intensive care beds in Italy, the seven southern regions and islands counted just 1,582 between them, according to the Repubblica daily.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, who extended the “lockdown” to the whole country this week, said on Wednesday the production and distribution of intensive care equipment for hospitals across the nation would be ramped up.

The Campania region currently has 149 cases: 56 are being treated in Naples’ infectious diseases hospitals, with 11 in intensive care.

Should those numbers swell, the city’s other hospitals – starting with the Cardarelli – will step up.

Its reconverted building will have eight intensive care beds and 12 high-dependency beds.

Should they fill up too, the hospital is ready to convert other wings, such as the elective surgery wards.

Masked figures in white protective suits stand ready at a tent set up outside the accident and emergency department, where any new arrivals presenting suspect symptoms will be tested.

“The north was caught unawares, but we’ve had a bit of time to prepare. I hope it will be enough,” said Dr Maria De Cristofaro, 65, head of intensive care at the Cardarelli.

She said intensive care doctors were “being depicted as heroes… but we cannot perform miracles”.

It was “difficult to justify” the decision by many southerners working in the north to return home, she said, “bringing to virus into their houses, directly to their loved ones”.

‘HELP EACH OTHER’

But many in Naples said they sympathised with those who feared being trapped far from family.

“If I had been there, I would have tried to come back,” said 22-year old Cristina Agosto, as she stood on the sea-front gazing across the bay at the Vesuvius volcano.

For all the media coverage about how an epidemic in the south would bring the country to its knees, many Neapolitans were not barricaded in their houses, but cycling or jogging along the promenade in the sunshine.

Ms Roberta Fusco, a 26-year old influencer strolling with her mother under the beach-front palm trees, said she had self-isolated for a week after returning from Milan, but had been dying to feel the sea breeze on her face.

“We are worried, but we know there are lots of people crowdfunding for the hospitals, and that will help,” she said.

Across the south, from Sicily to Puglia, locals are forking over funds.

One such campaign, launched by 23-year old medical student Federica De Masi, has already raised nearly 338,000 euros (S$534,829.81) for the Cotugno infectious disease hospital in Naples.

“We have to help each other, because we have neither the necessary resources nor the equipment at the moment to fight,” she wrote on the gofundme website.

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