Scene from Italy: Coronavirus patients are considered in danger only before they die

Papa John XXII Hospital in Bergamo is the hospital that is the most heavily loaded with the pandemic of the Coronobrus. This city is located in northern Italy, in the province of Lombardy, which is the most affected area of Coronavirus. The scenes from this hospital are terrible. Corridors are packed with hospital beds with patients trying to get [...]
This city is located in northern Italy, in the province of Lombardy, which is the most affected area of Coronavirus.
The scenes from this hospital are terrible. Corridors are packed with hospital beds with patients trying to breathe.
The medical staff wearing masks, gloves, and protective suits are in constant haste.
Everything is filled with coronary patients, including waiting rooms. The number of newly new patients is not shrinking, and the same is happening throughout northern Italy.
Hospitals are losing their battle with the virus. The staff is constantly working in an effort to save as many patients as possible to escape death.
They gather around new patients to set up their heart rate monitors, infusion, and, most important, respirators. Without them, patients cannot survive.
Looks like you're in intensive care and you're actually in the emergency department. The intensive care is already full.
All departments are so crowded that very difficult cases are not considered critical until they are about to die. The infected constantly come, the Kosovas broadcasts.
The medical staff has difficulty communicating with patients through respirators.
They are weak, can barely speak and are deaf by hospital noise and constant heartbeat.
The respiratory task is to equalize oxygen in the lungs.
Doctors say Coddy-19 does not touch the body the same as the flu. Rather than chronic pneumonia, which affects hundreds of lives each day. Roberto Costentin, head of the Department of Emergency and Waiting Management, says they have never seen this kind of situation.
This is an extremely heavy pneumonia that is burdening the entire health system, because every day we have 50 to 60 new patients, who are in serious condition and most of them require a large amount of oxygen”, Cosentin found for Sky News.
Doctor Laurenzo Grazzioli admits he is contacted by colleagues from outside and concerned. It urges other countries to follow the example of China and Italy and shut down everything. Thus, the spread of infection will slow down, although it does not overcome the virus.
I haven't been so stressed in my life. People are in critical condition. They die without treatment. Now we've come to wonder if we're doing enough. We have 100 anesthetics and we're trying to do our best, but maybe it's not enough, “says Graziooli.
Bergamo's hospital laboratory is continuing to test viruses to find a way to stop it. However, staff says much time is needed.
The situation in Bergamo is being called an apocalypse, and Italian doctors send a message to the world: “become nearly”












