Coronavirus: Italy says it's had 41 new COVID-19 deaths in just 24 hours

Authored by euronews.com and submitted by Nafdik_Ya_Bashar
image for Coronavirus: Italy says it's had 41 new COVID-19 deaths in just 24 hours

Italy says it's had 41 new COVID-19 deaths in just 24 hours.

The country's civil protection agency said on Thursday evening that 3,858 people had been infected and 148 had died.

It came as the UK and Switzerland announced their first deaths from the disease.

Earlier on Thursday, the World Health Organization (WHO) urged people not to give up fighting the outbreak.

It has now killed 3,281 people globally and infected more than 95,000.

"This is not a drill, this is not a time to give up, this is not a time for excuses, this is a time for pulling out all the stops," WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said.

China reported 143 new cases in the past 24 hours, but most new cases are outside China. The number of newly reported cases in South Korea appears to be declining, WHO said.

France's health ministry announced three new deaths from COVID-19 and said there were 138 fresh infections.

The death toll in France is now at seven.

One 73-year-old in l'Oise, where there are more than 100 cases of the virus, died and another person, who is 64 years old died, in the department of l'Aisne.

French President Emmanuel Macron said an epidemic in France was "inevitable".

Read more: 'My kids exhaust me more than COVID-19,' says French doctor in quarantine with his family

A day after announcing it would shut all schools and universities for two weeks, Italy reported a sharp hike in COVID-19 deaths.

The death toll jumped from 107 people on Wednesday to 148 on Thursday.

The northern regions of Emilia-Romagna and Lombardy — which surround Milan — remain the worst-hit with nearly three-quarters of all the country's infections.

Lombardy has had 98 deaths and 2,251 cases; Emilia-Romagna 30 fatalities and 698 infections.

Angelo Borrelli, who heads up Italy's civil protection agency, said the outbreak had not hit the number of hospital beds available.

"For the moment, there are no major difficulties regarding the number of beds available in hospital structures," said Borrelli.

"When the intensive care beds are all occupied in one region (...) our coordination centre finds them in the neighbouring regions."

Of the 3,858 coronavirus cases, 1,790 people are in hospital and 351 in intensive care.

A government decree that took effect Thursday urged the country's famously demonstrative citizens to stay at least 1 metre apart from each other, placed restrictions on visiting nursing homes and urged the elderly not to go outside unless absolutely necessary.

That directive appeared to be widely ignored, as school closures nationwide left many Italian children in the care of their grandparents. Parks in Rome overflowed with both young and old, undercutting government efforts to shield older Italians from the virus that hits the elderly harder than others. Italy has the world's oldest population after Japan.

Lorenzo Romano, making lunch for his grandchildren, saw a positive side to having kids stay home from school.

“Altogether, it makes me happy, because then I have them around me more,” he said.

Ghebreyesus, the director-general of WHO, had strong words during its Thursday update on the spread of COVID-19.

He said it wasn't a drill and not a time to give up.

"We are preoccupied with the fact that in certain countries the level of political engagement and actions does not correspond with the level of the threat with which we are confronted," said Ghebreyesus.

"Countries have been preparing themselves for such a scenario for decades," he added. "It is time to react.

"This epidemic is a threat to all countries, rich and poor.

"Even high-income countries should expect surprises, the solution is to prepare in an aggressive manner.

"We don't think that containment should be abandoned. Don't give up, don't surrender, use a comprehensive approach," he added.

Meanwhile, WHO said it was aware a dog in Hong Kong had tested positive for the virus but said that they do not believe that this is a huge driver of transmission.

The struggling British airline Flybe collapsed on Thursday amid drops in demand caused by the new coronavirus, leaving passengers stranded and threatening the viability of regional airports across the country.

Flybe's fall highlights the damage that the virus outbreak has had on the airline industry, which has cut back on flights around the world as people avoid flying out of precaution.

The British regional airline narrowly avoided bankruptcy in January but had continued to lose money. Unions and opposition politicians attacked both the airline's owners and Prime Minister Boris Johnson's government for failing to act to save it.

“We're all a bit gutted - Flybe is a household name, we've been flying with them for 40 years and we really tried to do everything we could back at the turn of the year,” Transport Secretary Grant Shapps told Sky News.

Shapps said that for “an already weak company,” the virus made survival impossible.

The UK Civil Aviation Authority urged customers to make their own alternative travel arrangements.

Jérôme Salomon, the general director of health in France, said there were studies underway to better understand the virus, especially as it evolves in France.

"There are two different families, we don't know if the two viruses coexist or if they evolve towards each other or if we can have infections with both," Salomon said as he explained that the virus had evolved.

He said some people were sick with few symptoms for a couple of days whereas others developed a stronger cough and could be sick for over two weeks.

He emphasised that the people most at risk for the virus were elderly adults.

Meanwhile, French news agencies reported that a French parliamentarian was hospitalised as a suspect case of coronavirus on Thursday.

jumeauu on March 5th, 2020 at 21:03 UTC »

A government decree that took effect Thursday urged the country's famously demonstrative citizens to stay at least 1 metre apart from each other, placed restrictions on visiting nursing homes and urged the elderly not to go outside unless absolutely necessary.

That directive appeared to be widely ignored, as school closures nationwide left many Italian children in the care of their grandparents. Parks in Rome overflowed with both young and old, undercutting government efforts to shield older Italians from the virus that hits the elderly harder than others. Italy has the world's oldest population after Japan.

Lorenzo Romano, making lunch for his grandchildren, saw a positive side to having kids stay home from school.

“Altogether, it makes me happy, because then I have them around me more,” he said.

Erick921 on March 5th, 2020 at 20:28 UTC »

Take it from an actual Italian: our population is on average very old, even for the European standard. All the deaths so far occurred in old people who suffered some other serious conditions (some of those were even cancer patients).

EDIT: I am not trying to make old people deaths less relevant. I have older relatives as well. I am just advising to not panic and focus on protecting the more vulnerable individuals.

morph113 on March 5th, 2020 at 17:57 UTC »

I'm curious when the first death in Germany is going to happen. Surprisingly there has been no confirmed Coronavirus death yet in Germany, despite the number of cases currently doubling every day. Out of 514 cases only 2 are considered serious so far. I wonder why there is a considerably higher number of fatalities in other countries and in Germany none so far.