Health

Coronavirus Italy: Victims over 80 may not get intensive care

Italian coronavirus victims over 80 will not receive treatment if situation worsens under emergency plans, as PM warns country is entering its ‘riskiest weeks’

  • Officials warn it may be impossible to treat every virus patient in intensive care
  • Plans drawn up in Turin propose that criteria ‘must include age of less than 80’
  • Doctors have described making life-or-death decisions over who will be treated
  • Prime minister Giuseppe Conte warned that ‘we have not yet reached the peak’ 
  • Coronavirus symptoms: what are they and should you see a doctor?

Italian coronavirus patients who are 80 or older will not receive intensive care if the crisis worsens, under emergency plans being proposed in Turin. 

The plans drawn up by civil protection officials warn that ‘it will be necessary to apply criteria for access to intensive treatment’ if there are too many patients.

The document, seen by the Daily Telegraph, proposes that these criteria ‘must include age of less than 80’.  

Doctors have already described making life-or-death decisions about who can be treated and who may effectively be left to die. 

One doctor said a patient’s fate ‘is decided by age and by health conditions’, adding: ‘This is how it is in a war.’ 

Prime minister Giuseppe Conte warned today that the country is entering its ‘riskiest weeks’ as he signalled ‘we have not yet reached the peak’.  

Work was underway on a new field hospital in Milan today, with a structure normally used for sports being converted to a makeshift intensive care wing Work was underway on a new field hospital in Milan today, with a structure normally used for sports being converted to a makeshift intensive care wing

Work was underway on a new field hospital in Milan today, with a structure normally used for sports being converted to a makeshift intensive care wing 

A patient flashed a victory sign as she was brought on a stretcher into the temporary Columbus Covid 2 hospital at the Gemelli Centre in Rome A patient flashed a victory sign as she was brought on a stretcher into the temporary Columbus Covid 2 hospital at the Gemelli Centre in Rome

A patient flashed a victory sign as she was brought on a stretcher into the temporary Columbus Covid 2 hospital at the Gemelli Centre in Rome

A map showing the number of cases across Europe, with Italy still the worst-affected country. The dots show small countries such as Andorra and San Marino A map showing the number of cases across Europe, with Italy still the worst-affected country. The dots show small countries such as Andorra and San Marino

A map showing the number of cases across Europe, with Italy still the worst-affected country. The dots show small countries such as Andorra and San Marino 

A patient’s other health conditions will also be taken into account when beds in intensive care are allocated, according to the planning document. 

Doctors will also consider whether they are likely to recover from resuscitation if they are taken to hospital in an emergency. 

‘Should it become impossible to provide all patients with intensive care services, it will be necessary to apply criteria for access to intensive treatment, which depends on the limited resources available,’ the document says. 

Officials acknowledge that the plans will force hospitals to ‘focus on those cases in which the cost/benefit ratio is more favorable for clinical treatment’. 

Italian medics have already described how hospitals have been ‘overwhelmed’ by the health crisis, with Italy suffering the worst outbreak in Europe.  

Turin is part of the Piedmont region, which neighbours Lombardy where the largest number of cases have been found.  

Many cases in Lombardy have been in small towns, but there have been fears of a major spread into Milan which would leave hospitals even further stretched.  

Lombardy governor Attilio Fontana said the situation in areas around Milan was only ‘getting worse’.

‘We are close to the point where we will no longer be able to resuscitate people because we will be out of intensive care unit beds,’ Fontana told Sky TG24.

‘We need those machines (doctors) use to ventilate lungs, artificial respirators that unfortunately we cannot find,’ Fontana said.  

Emergency: A health worker wearing a protective suit and mask wheels a patient on a bed at a hospital in Brescia in northern Italy Emergency: A health worker wearing a protective suit and mask wheels a patient on a bed at a hospital in Brescia in northern Italy

Emergency: A health worker wearing a protective suit and mask wheels a patient on a bed at a hospital in Brescia in northern Italy 

Work is underway on a new temporary hospital in Milan today, amid fears that the city could suffer a larger virus outbreak than it has done so far Work is underway on a new temporary hospital in Milan today, amid fears that the city could suffer a larger virus outbreak than it has done so far

Work is underway on a new temporary hospital in Milan today, amid fears that the city could suffer a larger virus outbreak than it has done so far 

The new San Raffaele temporary hospital is being built in Milan, with medics forced to work in makeshift conditions The new San Raffaele temporary hospital is being built in Milan, with medics forced to work in makeshift conditions

The new San Raffaele temporary hospital is being built in Milan, with medics forced to work in makeshift conditions 

Treatment: A hospital worker tends to a patient lying in bed in a temporary structure outside the hospital in Brescia where medics are handling suspected virus patients Treatment: A hospital worker tends to a patient lying in bed in a temporary structure outside the hospital in Brescia where medics are handling suspected virus patients

Treatment: A hospital worker tends to a patient lying in bed in a temporary structure outside the hospital in Brescia where medics are handling suspected virus patients 

Milan mayor Beppe Sala said he had managed to secure shipments of surgical masks from China to help cover a growing shortage.

‘Milan has always had excellent relations with the main Chinese cities and I made a few phone calls over the past few days in search of masks,’ the Milan mayor said.

‘The first shipment arrived (Friday) and we will now distribute them to doctors, to our staff.’

The European Commission also announced the imminent delivery of one million masks from Germany. 

Some medics have been working from makeshift facilities, with tents springing outside hospitals to allow patients to be tested for coronavirus. 

There are also fears that the poorer south of Italy would be unable to cope if the virus spread as rapidly as it has in the wealthy north. 

Italian premier Giuseppe Conte has warned that some people are continuing to travel south despite an unprecedented nationwide lockdown. 

‘Scientists tell us that we have not yet reached the peak. These are the riskiest weeks and we need the utmost precaution,’ he said.  

‘Things like people leaving Milan on weekends to spend time with their family or at their residences in the south must absolutely stop. 

‘We can no longer afford behavioural errors,’ Conte told the Corriere della Sera newspaper. 

The virus ‘is our most important challenge of the past decades,’ he said.

Italy has confirmed 24,747 virus cases and 1,809 deaths in the worst outbreak outside China.  

The governor of Venice’s Veneto region also called on ‘everyone to remain in isolation’ to avoid putting hospitals under further strain.

‘If you do not follow the rules, the healthcare system will crash and I will have to impose a curfew,’ Veneto governor Luca Zaia warned. 

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