So I'm in Italy, more deaths than China yesterday. We have 6pm daily updates, yesterday 620 deaths, it will not be less today.
Certainly Italy must have made mistakes right at the beginning when it was spreading, although to be fair, no one knew what was happening yet.
We are all asking ourselves why our death rate is so high. It's a daily question, it's the subject of nightly tv shows. I would think it's a combination of factors:
not knowing what was going on at first
large number of elderly
society: families living together
culture: very social. All ages meet up. The old often meet in the local bar/café on a daily basis to play cards. People my age go out for a pizza with friends every weekend. Teens and early twenties all meet daily in groups after school. It's fun to be a teen in Italy, but they are very touchy feely, lots of kisses and hugs, holding of each other's arms and hands even between friends is very common of all ages.
Health service: not enough ICU beds, not enough doctors and nurses so when the virus burst, there just weren't enough beds to help everyone.
Numbers: could be the number of infected people are much higher than we know, which would make the death rate more understandable.
Here, there is no doubt that the coronavirus is not your average flu. First of all because it is much more contagious. Secondly, nobody was immune to it, we have no medicines to cure it, no vaccines.
Although deaths are 90% among the elderly with pre-existing conditions (we know of many elderly cured, too), there are also many in their forties and fifties in the ICU, some completely healthy people in this age range have sadly died, too. We are so sad for all these families.
Many doctors and nurses have been infected. In one hospital alone near Milan, 70 health care workers are positive and 20 have died.
Thankfully, no children have been seriously affected at this point.
Everything except for supermarkets and pharmacies are closed. We are allowed to go for a walk or a run by ourselves close to home but that might be banned too since our numbers are not going down.
Funerals and weddings are banned. People die on their own as family is not allowed in to keep them company, not even on their last moments. On tv we see military trucks of coffins being taken away to be cremated.
We learn that so many talented people are working like crazy to turn what they do daily into something needed to go through this virus. A tights' factory has begun making masks with some particular fabric they have which is very resistant. Can't remember the words. It's not a mask a doctor would wear, but it could be a solution for the rest of us when we have to go out and do the shopping.
A lung specialist in one of the hospitals has come up with a way to have one respirator feed two patients, doubling up the number of people who can be treated.
I am hopeful when I read that 3boy's son's girlfriend's grandfather is reacting well to the trial medicine. This is so important. I do hope he keeps improving.
To me, this is not as bad as BD, or maybe my LBS skills have helped me and my kids just accept what's happening and have a view that we just carry on. However, I do feel it could be the worst world disaster yet. JMO.
We try to stay positive but there is no future to imagine at this point. I trust that it will all go back to normal as China does seem to be heading towards that.
In the meant time, keep far from others, stay in, obviously wash hands. They tell us that quarantine is one of the main ways to battle a pandemic. In southern Italy which was quarantined at the same time as we were, the numbers are really low, which shows that early lock down works. Can't stop the virus, but we can put the health service in a position to be able to treat us properly.