Italy's medics at 'end of our strength' as they too fall ill | The Business Standard
Skip to main content
  • Latest
  • Economy
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Industry
    • Analysis
    • Bazaar
    • RMG
    • Corporates
    • Aviation
  • Videos
    • TBS Today
    • TBS Stories
    • TBS World
    • News of the day
    • TBS Programs
    • Podcast
    • Editor's Pick
  • World+Biz
  • Features
    • Panorama
    • The Big Picture
    • Pursuit
    • Habitat
    • Thoughts
    • Splash
    • Mode
    • Tech
    • Explorer
    • Brands
    • In Focus
    • Book Review
    • Earth
    • Food
    • Luxury
    • Wheels
  • Subscribe
    • Get the Paper
    • Epaper
    • GOVT. Ad
  • More
    • Sports
    • TBS Graduates
    • Bangladesh
    • Supplement
    • Infograph
    • Archive
    • Gallery
    • Long Read
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Magazine
    • Climate Change
    • Health
    • Cartoons
  • বাংলা
The Business Standard

Friday
July 18, 2025

Sign In
Subscribe
  • Latest
  • Economy
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Industry
    • Analysis
    • Bazaar
    • RMG
    • Corporates
    • Aviation
  • Videos
    • TBS Today
    • TBS Stories
    • TBS World
    • News of the day
    • TBS Programs
    • Podcast
    • Editor's Pick
  • World+Biz
  • Features
    • Panorama
    • The Big Picture
    • Pursuit
    • Habitat
    • Thoughts
    • Splash
    • Mode
    • Tech
    • Explorer
    • Brands
    • In Focus
    • Book Review
    • Earth
    • Food
    • Luxury
    • Wheels
  • Subscribe
    • Get the Paper
    • Epaper
    • GOVT. Ad
  • More
    • Sports
    • TBS Graduates
    • Bangladesh
    • Supplement
    • Infograph
    • Archive
    • Gallery
    • Long Read
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Magazine
    • Climate Change
    • Health
    • Cartoons
  • বাংলা
FRIDAY, JULY 18, 2025
Italy's medics at 'end of our strength' as they too fall ill

Coronavirus chronicle

Reuters
23 March, 2020, 08:55 pm
Last modified: 23 March, 2020, 09:05 pm

Related News

  • Italy needs to upgrade ageing stadiums for club revenue boost, Euro 2032
  • Sicily's Mount Etna erupts with columns of smoke and ash
  • Family reunion: Italian Embassy urges visa applicants to be patient
  • Five European defence ministers to meet in Rome on Friday
  • Efforts underway to enhance legal immigration in Italy: Adviser Asif Nazrul

Italy's medics at 'end of our strength' as they too fall ill

"We do not have sufficient resources and especially staff because apart from everything else, now the staff are beginning to get sick"

Reuters
23 March, 2020, 08:55 pm
Last modified: 23 March, 2020, 09:05 pm
Medical staff in a protective suit treats a patient suffering from coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in an intensive care unit at the Oglio Po hospital in Cremona, Italy March 19, 2020/ Reuters
Medical staff in a protective suit treats a patient suffering from coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in an intensive care unit at the Oglio Po hospital in Cremona, Italy March 19, 2020/ Reuters

At Italy's Oglio Po hospital, 25 out of 90 doctors are infected with the coronavirus, compounding the strain faced by a health system overwhelmed by the world's second-biggest outbreak.

Adding in nurses, technicians and other employees, a fifth of the hospital's personnel has tested positive, hospital director Daniela Ferrari said.

They and healthcare workers like them almost certainly unwittingly spread the virus before needing treatment or quarantine themselves, researchers and unions say.

The Business Standard Google News Keep updated, follow The Business Standard's Google news channel

The picture is the same at other hospitals, among family doctors and in nursing homes - exacerbated, unions, sector leaders and medics say, by them not having enough masks and gloves when the outbreak was detected a month ago.

"We are at the end of our strength," said Doctor Romano Paolucci, who came out of retirement to help the Oglio Po hospital near Cremona, one of the worst-hit towns in the Lombardy region.

"We do not have sufficient resources and especially staff because apart from everything else, now the staff are beginning to get sick."

In Lombardy, the Italian region with the highest number of cases and deaths, at least two hospitals became vehicles of contamination, with patients infecting medical staff who then spread the disease as they travelled around their communities before a stringent lockdown was imposed.

That is one factor that has helped the virus spread so quickly, said Giuseppe Remuzzi, director of the Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research.

"Patients infected other patients and doctors who then went out and contaminated others," Remuzzi said.

At a national level, 4,268 health workers - or 0.4 per cent of the total - had contracted the virus as of March 20, according to the National Health Institute.

In Lombardy's northeastern city of Bergamo, 134 family doctors out of 600 - or 22% - had fallen sick or were quarantined, Guido Marinoni, the head of the local association of general practitioners, said. Three doctors have died.

In the city's nursing homes, the situation was even worse, with 1,464 health workers infected out of 5,805, he said. Bergamo has been so overwhelmed that the army has stepped in to move bodies to other provinces as the cemetery was too full.

Marinoni said that for the first two weeks after the disease was first detected in northern Italy on Feb. 21, family doctors lacked masks and gloves and so were easily contaminated by coughing and feverish patients who went to see them without knowing they had the coronavirus.

"TOY GUN"

Only in early March, the family doctors of Bergamo were given 25-30 surgical masks, he said.

"If a person with the disease contaminates on average another two people, a doctor who is moving around the community can contaminate at least another 10 people and this spreads the contagion in an exponential way," Marinoni said.

"It's like fighting a war with a toy gun. I hope the rest of Europe learn from the good things Italy did, but also from our mistakes."

The head of the government's coronavirus relief effort says Italy needs 90 million masks a month and it has "activated all possible channels" to achieve that.

Protective and medical equipment, including masks and ventilators, "are produced in faraway places, we don't have a national industry with the capacity to make them on a big scale", Domenico Arcuri told state television on Sunday.

Lombardy governor Attilio Fontana said on Thursday he had signed a contract for 4 million masks from Jordan.

At several hospitals and health centres of Italy's financial capital Milan, public and private, staff and unions also complain of inadequate measures to protect personnel.

At Milan's Niguarda hospital, a patient and a nurse in the psychiatric ward started showing symptoms a few hours apart from each other on March 10, according to a letter sent by CISL union representative Rossella Delcuratolo to hospital managers.

Within days, 11 patients and eight nurses in the ward had contracted the virus, Delcuratolo said.

"We are fighting the spread of the virus by imposing a lockdown on society, but we also need to stop it spreading within the health sector," she told Reuters. "Health workers live in fear of infecting people at work and at home."

Even in places where protective gear was present from the start, such as Policlinico San Marco near Bergamo, several staffs were still infected, said Roberto Mezzetti, a vascular surgeon who volunteered to help out with coronavirus patients.

They probably contracted the virus outside the hospital as they went about their normal lives in the early stages of the outbreak, he said. Three of them were in serious condition.

Many health workers say they should all be tested. Lombardy said at the weekend family doctors would be given swabs, while hospital staff would have their temperature taken daily.

But some doctors warn that if everyone is tested, the real rate of infection among medics could be so high that hospitals would stop working.

"I fear that hospitals would empty," said Mario Riccio, head of anaesthesiology at the Oglio Po hospital.

 

Italy / medics

Comments

While most comments will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive, moderation decisions are subjective. Published comments are readers’ own views and The Business Standard does not endorse any of the readers’ comments.

Top Stories

  • UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk signing the MoU establishing an office of OHCHR in Dhaka on 18 July 2025. Photo: Courtesy
    UN rights office to open mission in Bangladesh; MoU signed
  • Ongoing curfew in Gopalganj on 17 July 2025. Photo: Olid Ebna Shah/TBS
    Curfew in Gopalganj to remain in effect till 6am tomorrow
  • In July last year, Dhaka became unrecognisable, with once-congested streets lying empty under the spectral quiet of curfew. Photo: TBS
    Curfews, block raids, and internet blackouts: Hasina’s last ditch efforts to cling to power

MOST VIEWED

  • Obayed Ullah Al Masud. Sketch: TBS
    Islami Bank chairman resigns
  • GP profit drops 31% in H1
    GP profit drops 31% in H1
  • Illustration: TBS
    Cenbank recognises 10 banks, 2 NBFIs as sustainable financial institutions
  • Rohingya refugees queue for water in a camp near Cox’s Bazar. File Photo: REUTERS/Mohammad Ponir Hossain
    Rohingyas start internal civil society polls in Cox's Bazar to form rights body
  • Around 99% of the cotton used in Bangladesh’s export and domestic garment production is imported. Photo: Collected
    NBR withdraws advance tax on imports of cotton, man-made fibres
  • Illustration: TBS
    FY26 monetary policy: To ease when is the question

Related News

  • Italy needs to upgrade ageing stadiums for club revenue boost, Euro 2032
  • Sicily's Mount Etna erupts with columns of smoke and ash
  • Family reunion: Italian Embassy urges visa applicants to be patient
  • Five European defence ministers to meet in Rome on Friday
  • Efforts underway to enhance legal immigration in Italy: Adviser Asif Nazrul

Features

In July last year, Dhaka became unrecognisable, with once-congested streets lying empty under the spectral quiet of curfew. Photo: TBS

Curfews, block raids, and internet blackouts: Hasina’s last ditch efforts to cling to power

57m | Panorama
The Mymensingh district administration confirmed that Zamindar Shashikant Acharya Chowdhury built the house near Shashi Lodge for his staff. Photo: Collected

The Mymensingh house might not belong to Satyajit Ray's family, but there’s little to celebrate

1h | Panorama
Illustration: TBS

20 years of war, 7.5m tonnes of bombs, 1.3m dead: How the US razed Vietnam to the ground

20h | The Big Picture
On 17 July 2024, Dhaka University campus became a warzone with police firing tear shells and rubber bullets to control the student movement. File Photo: Rajib Dhar/TBS

17 July 2024: Students oust Chhatra League from campuses, Hasina promises 'justice' after deadly crackdown

1d | Panorama

More Videos from TBS

NCP’s arrival turns Munshiganj vibrant with festivity

NCP’s arrival turns Munshiganj vibrant with festivity

1h | TBS Today
How did Pakistan shoot down India’s fighter jets?

How did Pakistan shoot down India’s fighter jets?

2h | TBS World
Bangladesh's Lower and Middle Classes Under Pressure from High Prices

Bangladesh's Lower and Middle Classes Under Pressure from High Prices

2h | TBS Stories
Air India cockpit recording suggests captain cut fuel to engines

Air India cockpit recording suggests captain cut fuel to engines

3h | TBS World
EMAIL US
contact@tbsnews.net
FOLLOW US
WHATSAPP
+880 1847416158
The Business Standard
  • About Us
  • Contact us
  • Sitemap
  • Advertisement
  • Privacy Policy
  • Comment Policy
Copyright © 2025
The Business Standard All rights reserved
Technical Partner: RSI Lab

Contact Us

The Business Standard

Main Office -4/A, Eskaton Garden, Dhaka- 1000

Phone: +8801847 416158 - 59

Send Opinion articles to - oped.tbs@gmail.com

For advertisement- sales@tbsnews.net