Italian hospitals without beds as the death toll from the coronary increases

Hospitals in Italy's closed region of Lombardy are starting to run out of beds after the country registered its highest daily increase in deaths from Coronavirus. Twenty days after its outbreak, Italy is trying to contain the spread of the virus and find room and beds in intensive care units, which [...]
Twenty days after its explosion, Italy is trying to contain the spread of the virus and find space and beds in intensive care units, which are reducing day-to-day.
To manage the emergency, the sick are placed in the operating rooms or in the hospital corridors. “I am very concerned,” said Prof Massimo Galli, director of infectious diseases at the Sacco Hospital in Milan, reports The Guardian, broadcast Periscopi.
The hospital pressure in Lombardi these days is huge. I'm very, very concerned about the impact the virus will have on our health system. ”
The total of Lombardy, including Milan, Italy's financial capital and 14 provinces in the most affected regions from the north, involving more than 15 million people, who have been closed until 3 April, under measures not seen since World War II.
Police controls are under way at railway stations, tax stands, roads entering and leaving the inner cities and airports.
Those who need to leave the region from a serious necessity can do so only if they have self-defictification by declaring they should cross the Lombardy border for business reasons, health reasons or because they must return to their homes.
Otherwise, the death toll from the Coronavirus in Italy rose from 366 to 463 on Monday, according to the head of the civil protection agency. The total number of cases in Italy increased by 24% in 9172, and of those initially infected, 724 had been fully recovered. About 733 people were in intensive care of an earlier total of 650./Periscopi/












