Monday, March 30, 2020

CORONAVIRUS: ITALY EXTENDS LOCKDOWN AMID HOPES OF TURNING CORNER



Italy has extended its lockdown until Easter, but there is some hope as the country reports a declining infection rate.

The number of new coronavirus infections reported on Monday was 1,648, as opposed to 3,815 the previous day.

The death toll, however, rose again, with 812 deaths reported, compared with 756 the day before.

Italy believes the peak of its crisis will come in just over a week's time.

It is the world's hardest-hit country in terms of the number of deaths.

In total, 11,591 have died in the country, the government says.

On Monday, the national doctors' association announced the deaths of 11 more doctors, taking the total up to 61.

The lockdown - which was due to end on Friday - will now continue until at least 12 April, which is Easter Sunday.

Italians have been living under these strict rules for three weeks, with most shops, bars and restaurants shut. They are not allowed to leave their homes unless it is deemed essential.

The governor of the southern region of Puglia said on Saturday the restrictions should remain in place until May.


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Credit: BBC NEWS

THE WORLD'S OLDEST MAN BOB WEIGHTON TURNS 112

Credit: Bob Weighton



Bob Weighton, the world's oldest man, turns 112 today. Born in 1908, he is the same age as Inter Milan football club and pre-dates Selfridges department store and the beatification of Joan of Arc.

As young Robert came into this world, Herbert Asquith was still a week from becoming British prime minister, and King Edward VII had two more years to live.

Here we take a look at some of the little-known events that have happened on the birthdays of Mr. Weighton, as he enjoys this one at his home in Alton, Hampshire.

In 1908, Robert is the 15th most popular boys' name in England and Wales. It is flanked by Frank and Harold, while William, John, and George claim the top spots. The favored girls' names are Mary, Elizabeth, Florence, and Annie.

In a pleasing coincidence, Joan Hocquard, from Poole in Dorset, is also 112 today and so is the UK's joint-oldest person. Her name is fairly unusual - in 1908 Joan is the 161st most popular and doesn't really breakthrough until the 1930s.

Another Robert, Captain Robert Falcon Scott, of the British Antarctic Expedition, dies on Bob's fourth birthday. Scott and four others trudge 850 miles to reach the South Pole. They arrive on 17 January to find the Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen has beaten them to it.

Edgar Evans is the first of Scott's team to die, followed a month later by Lawrence Oates. Henry Bowers, Edward Wilson and Scott huddle in a tent and try to sit out a storm while their food supplies dwindle.

On 29 March, Scott writes "it seems a pity but I do not think I can write more". The men's bodies are found eight months later, just 11 miles from their next food store.

On Bob's 10th birthday, British forces are struggling in the First Battle of Amman in the Ottoman Empire. Bad weather, boggy underfoot conditions, and unrelenting attacks are among the factors that lead to the withdrawal of troops a couple of days later.

Closer to home though, and maybe for a little light relief, the Times newspaper that day publishes an extract of the will of a Mr. Astley Weston, who left not just money for his children, but advice too.

Among other words of wisdom, he urges them to "not take any intoxicating drinks or narcotics" and to avoid "extravagance, self-indulgence, and indolence". Finally, if they should consider marrying, they were to consult their mother and take her advice.

Fast-forward now to 29 March 1927. A 19-year-old Bob might have been interested in what is happening on the sands of Florida's Daytona Beach, where the specially built Sunbeam 1000hp is revving its engine.

Henry Segrave is determined to beat the land speed record and finally crack the 200mph mark. For official ratification, he has to complete two runs. Strong winds on the outward leg cause the car to skid violently. Segrave is forced to drive into the sea to slow down.

Remarkably, he is able to make the return journey. The speeds clocked on the two runs are 200.668mph and 207.015mph, giving an average speed of 203.792mph.

The car is restored 90 years later (when Bob is a youthful 109) and is on display at the National Motor Museum at Beaulieu, Hampshire.

We have moved on to 29 March 1938. Bob turns 30 and the country is gearing up for war. In the House of Commons, a debate is raging about… the importation of rubber footwear.

MPs are concerned that 2.5 million foreign rubber boots and shoes were shipped to the UK in the first two months of the year, threatening the interests of British shoemakers. The President of the Board of Trade reassures his colleagues that he will help protect the British market.

A fairly dull discussion, but perhaps worth it for the waggish contribution of the Glaswegian MP JJ Davidson, who pipes up to say: "Does that mean that the President of the Board of Trade will not support the foreign heels?"

It is not recorded whether his fellow backbenchers find him funny.

In 1943, Bob turns 35 on the same day John Major is born. In 1951, now 43, he could have taken the eight-year-old future prime minister to celebrate their birthdays by attending the opening night of The King and me on Broadway, starring Gertrude Lawrence and Yul Brynner.

Lawrence is unaware she has liver and abdominal cancer and faints backstage after a matinee before being admitted to hospital. Just 15 months later, she is dead.

In 1955, on Bob's 47th birthday, a new world rail speed record is set by SNCF in France. The train reaches 331km/h (206mph), fast enough to damage the track.

We're now at the end of the swinging 60s and Bob turns 61 in 1969, the day the Eurovision Song Contest ends in a four-way draw between the United Kingdom, Spain, the Netherlands and France.

The organizers manage to cobble enough winner's medals together by using the ones they have earmarked for (up to three) songwriters. Other countries are so annoyed by the tie that four withdraw from the following year's competition, and a tiebreak procedure is introduced shortly afterward.

On 29 March 1974, Bob celebrates his 66th birthday. Also on that day, a group of farmers digging a well find a life-sized human head made from clay buried near Xian in China.

They call in the experts and a 2,200-year-old terracotta army is discovered.

Three pits are found to contain more than 8,000 soldiers, 130 chariots and 520 horses, thought to have been buried in order to help China's first emperor, Qin Shihuangdi, in the afterlife.

Bob could have marked his 72nd birthday by having a bet on the 134th Grand National, although he would have had to pick carefully.

There are only four finishers in the 30-strong field in 1980. The race is won by the American-owned horse Ben Nevis, ridden by Charlie Fenwick at a starting price of 40-1.

Bob turns 82 in 1990 - on the same day as the outbreak of the little-known Hyphen War, a conflict over what to call Czechoslovakia after the fall of the Communist government the previous year.

Slovak politicians feel "the Czechoslovak Republic" does not recognize Slovakia's equal stature, and want the state to be named "the Czecho-Slovak Republic".

It is resolved when the two agree to split the country (over more substantial issues) and on 1 January 1993, the two states become the Czech Republic and the Slovak Republic.

Bob's 101st birthday in 2009 is a difficult one for then Home Secretary Jacqui Smith, as the news breaks that she claimed parliamentary expenses for pay-per-view pornographic films.

The resulting scandal eventually leads to her resignation from the front benches, and in 2010 she loses her seat. The incident does, however, open up a new avenue for Ms. Smith - in 2011 she presents a radio documentary about pornography. It is called Porn Again.

In 2014, on Bob's 106th birthday, the first same-sex marriages in England and Wales take place. North Londoners and partners of 17 years Peter McGrath and David Cabreza become husband and husband at one minute past midnight.

And finally, in 2020, Bob reaches his 112 birthday - although he has had to cancel his celebrations because of the coronavirus outbreak.

He has lived through the reigns of five British monarchs, 22 UK prime ministers - serving a total of 27 terms - and 21 presidents of the USA.

He was alive during all three London Olympics, and both world wars and has weathered the Spanish flu, cholera, and smallpox.

It's anyone's guess as to what happens next year.

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Sunday, March 29, 2020

BREAKING NEWS: A 102-YEAR-OLD ITALIAN GRANDMOTHER HEALED FROM CORONAVIRUS IN ITALY.

Credit: Italica Grondona




It has already become a symbol of hope for all of us. It is also an example of how everyone is being cared for, regardless of age," said the president of the Liguria region Giovanni Toti
(4.2K) 

Italica Grondona, She was discharged from the Hospital San Martino of Genoa Italica Grondona, 102 years old, for all grandmother Lina, cured of coronavirus. This was announced by the president of Liguria Giovanni Toti explaining that he had heard her on the phone. "It has already become a symbol of hope for all of us. And also an example of how everyone is treated, regardless of age. There are no distinctions," he said. Her story has gone around the world so much that it also ends up on the Cnn: they call her the Highlander. 

"He thanked me," Toti told me, "telling me that she was well cared for and her words gave me incredible strength. The life of each of us is precious, including that of our grandparents for whom we are fighting every day, not without difficulty! For us it is simply a great Ligurian: strong, tenacious, resistant... and it's no coincidence that he turns off the candles on the Panarello cake! Come on Lina and thank you, it's no coincidence that your name, Italica: you are a beautiful page in our history!"


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Saturday, March 28, 2020

SPAIN SUFFERS ITS WORST DAY FOR COVID-19 DEATHS WITH 832- BRINGING TOLL TO 5,690

Photo Credit: Gatty Images


Spain has registered a new record number of coronavirus deaths in a single-day period with the army now being handed emergency powers to transfer bodies because undertakers can't cope.

The number of deaths from Covid-19 in the past 24 hours is 832, it emerged this morning.

It beats the previous Spanish record of 769 coronavirus deaths which was announced on Friday.

The grim statistic means 5,690 people with the virus have now died in Spain.

The number of new coronavirus cases registered in the past 24 hours is 8,000.

Spanish Ministry of Health figures show 72,248 people have been infected, 40,630 have needed to be hospitalized, 4,575 people have been admitted to intensive care and 12,285 people have been cured of the disease. 

Only Italy's single-day death tally is worse than Spain's - with 969 dying there from coronavirus in the 24 hours between Thursday and Friday. 

On Monday a second makeshift morgue is due to start functioning in Madrid after a retail center ice rink where families paid six pounds a time to skate became its first stop-gap body drop because of the saturation funeral parlors were facing.

The new temporary morgue, known locally as the Donut because of the way it looks from the sky, was built to be Madrid's Institute of Forensic Medicine but never opened. 

The figures come after the army was given special powers to transfer bodies because of the saturation undertakers are facing.


The sharp increase in the number of deaths caused by coronavirus has laid to bodies being left longer than normal.

The government gave soldiers temporary authorization to fill the void and help alleviate the problem by publishing the new order in an official state bulletin today.

The Ministry of Health-issued order states: 'The Armed Forces that form part of the operation against Covid-19 are authorized to drive and transfer corpses at the request of the appropriate authorities.'

The figures comes after the army was given special powers to transfer bodies because of the saturation undertakers are facing. Pictured: Members of the Military Emergencies Unit

Health Minister Salvador Illa said: 'Special attention needs to be paid during this health crisis to the issue of the transfer of corpses, to properly manage the removal and conservation of bodies through accumulation and the absence of available funeral services.'

The task of removing coronavirus victims' bodies is expected to fall on Spain's military emergency unit called UME which has been at the forefront of the mass disinfecting of residential elderly care homes and other public areas. 

The order is valid until mid-April but is expected to be extended if Spain's state of emergency goes from four weeks to six. 

Spain is now the fourth worst effected country in the world. Pictured: Medical staff in Madrid transfer a patient in a wheelchair

Spain's Defence Minister Margarita Robles told a Spanish TV program earlier this week soldiers tasked with disinfecting the homes as part of the fight against coronavirus were discovering abandoned bodies.

She said: 'The army, during some visits, has seen elderly people absolutely abandoned, if not dead in their beds.

Her comments have been criticized by senior nursing home workers who say the problem has been that undertakers were saturated by the number of deaths and could not cope.    

Only Italy's single-day death tally is worse than Spain's - with 969 dying there from coronavirus in the 24 hours between Thursday and Friday


Spain extended a nationwide lockdown on Thursday by a further 15 days to April 12 and said it was fighting a 'real war' over medical supplies to contain the death toll.  

Health authorities are hoping it will soon become clear whether the lockdown is having the desired effect. 

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, whose wife is infected with the virus, previously said this is the country's most difficult moment since its 1936-39 civil war.

'Only the oldest, who knew the hardships of the civil war and its aftermath, can remember collective situations that were harsher than the current one.

'The other generations in Spain have never, ever had to face as a collective something so hard.'   


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Credit: NATALIA PENZA FOR MAILONLINE

CHIOMA TESTS POSITIVE FOR COVID-19 FIANCÉ DAVIDO GOES INTO SELF-ISOLATION.

Credit: Davido & Chioma


Nigerian music star, David Adeleke, popularly known as Davido says he has gone into self-isolation.

He explained that he took the decision after his fiancée, Chioma, tested positive to coronavirus (COVID-19).

The music star announced this on Friday via his verified Twitter handle.

In the series of tweets, he noted that he recently returned to Nigeria from America after canceling his tour, while Chioma also came back from London recently with their baby.

Davido stated that although they had no symptoms and were perfectly fine, they decided to take the COVID-19 test on Wednesday along with the close associates they had recent contact with as a result of their travel history.

“Unfortunately, my fiancĂ©e’s result came back positive while all 31 others tested have come back negative, including our baby.

“We are, however, doing perfectly fine and she is even still yet to show any symptoms whatsoever,” he revealed.

According to the 27-year-old, Chioma has been quarantined while he has gone into self-isolation for the minimum 14 days.

He thanked his fans and well-wishers for their love and prayers in advance and urged them to stay at home, in order to curtail the spread of the disease.


Nigeria Confirms New Cases
Meanwhile, the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has confirmed five new cases of coronavirus (COVID-19), a totally of 70 in the country.

Unlike previous updates where Lagos has recorded at least one case, no new case of COVID-19 was confirmed in the state.

On the other hand, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) has trailed Lagos as the second worst-hit recorded three new cases while two were confirmed in Oyo State.

As of 8pm on March 27, the NCDC stressed that three cases have been discharged with only one death recorded.


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Thursday, March 26, 2020

CORONAVIRUS: PANGOLINS FOUND TO CARRY VIRUSES RELATED TO COVID-19

A trafficked pangolin in Kuala Lumpur: The animal is a suspect in the outbreak



Pangolins smuggled into China have been confirmed to contain viruses closely related to the one sweeping the world.

Sale of the animals in wildlife markets should be strictly prohibited to minimize the risk of future outbreaks, says an international team.

Pangolins are the most-commonly illegally trafficked mammal, used both as food and in traditional medicine.

Bats are thought to be the original viral source, with another species playing a role in human transmission.

In a new research paper, published in the journal Nature, researchers say their genetic data suggests "handling these animals requires considerable caution, and that their sale in wet markets should be strictly prohibited."



Further surveillance on pangolins in the wild in China and Southeast Asia is needed to understand their role in the emergence of coronaviruses and the risk of future transmission to humans, they add.

The ant-devouring scaly mammal said to be the most widely trafficked mammal in the world, is threatened with extinction. The animal's scales are in high demand in Asia for use in traditional Chinese medicine, while pangolin meat is considered a delicacy by some.


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Credit: Helen Briggs

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

AT LEAST 60 MIGRANTS ARE FOUND DEAD IN A TRUCK IN MOZAMBIQUE

Police officers in Tete Province, Mozambique, spoke to survivors sitting in a pickup after the discovery of the bodies on Tuesday.Credit...EPA, via Shutterstock



MAPUTO, Mozambique — More than 60 undocumented migrants believed to be Ethiopians were found dead in a cargo truck in northwestern Mozambique on Tuesday.

The truck, which had entered Mozambique from the neighboring country of Malawi, was stopped at a checkpoint in Moatize, near the Zambezi River in Tete Province, according to the online site Zitamar News.

According to the authorities, the driver was ordered to open the truck when officials heard bashing noises coming from the container, and 14 survivors were also found inside. The victims were said to have died from a lack of oxygen.

The survivors will be screened for the coronavirus and put into quarantine, health officials told Zitamar.

Mozambique is a transit route for African migrants trying to reach South Africa, one of the continent’s largest economies, according to the International Office on Migration, a United Nations body.

At least 200 unauthorized migrants, mostly from Egypt, Ethiopia, Malawi, and Somalia, have been arrested on suspicion of attempting to enter Tete Province this year, and all indicated that their destination was South Africa, according to Zitamar.

Migrants fleeing poverty or war in troubled areas of the world face perilous, and often deadly, journeys in search of a better life. Some are forced to make dangerous sea crossings; others are herded into vehicles to make arduous overland trips.

In southeastern England last year, 39 bodies were found in a refrigerated truck container abandoned in an industrial park. The police, in that case, confirmed that all the victims — who were believed to have been transported to Britain through a global human-trafficking network — were from Vietnam.

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And in August 2015, police officers in Austria found the decomposing bodies of 71 migrants who had been locked in a truck and left beside a highway.

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Credit: The Associated Press

ITALY HAS BANNED FUNERALS BECAUSE OF THE CORONAVIRUS CRISIS, DENYING DIGNITY TO THE DEAD IN ITALY

Photo Credit: Jilla Dastmalchi


Italy has banned funerals because of the coronavirus crisis. For many, the virus is now robbing families of the chance to say a final goodbye.

"This pandemic kills twice," says Andrea Cerato, who works in a funeral home in Milan. "First, it isolates you from your loved ones right before you die. Then, it doesn't allow anyone to get closure."

"Families are devastated and find it hard to accept."

'They have no choice but to trust us'
In Italy, many victims of Covid-19 are dying in hospital isolation without any family or friends. Visits are banned because the risk of contagion is too high.

While health authorities say the virus cannot be transmitted posthumously, it can still survive on clothes for a few hours. This means corpses are being sealed away immediately.

"So many families ask us if they can see the body one last time. But it's forbidden," says Massimo Mancastroppa, an undertaker in Cremona.


Lessons from Italy's lockdown
Life in Rome under coronavirus lockdown
The dead cannot be buried in their finest and favorite clothes. Instead, it is the grim anonymity of a hospital gown.

But Massimo is doing what he can.

"We put the clothes the family gives us on top of the corpse as if they were dressed," he says. "A shirt on top, a skirt below."

In this unprecedented situation, undertakers are suddenly finding themselves acting as replacement families, replacement friends, even replacement priests.

People close to those who die from the virus will often be in quarantine themselves.

"We take on all responsibility for them," says Andrea. "We send the loved ones a photo of the coffin that will be used, we then pick up the corpse from the hospital and we bury it or cremate it. They have no choice but to trust us."

The hardest thing for Andrea is not being able to ease the suffering of the bereaved. Instead of telling families all the things he can do, he is now forced to list everything he is no longer allowed to do.

"We can't dress them up, we can't brush their hair, we can't put makeup on them. We can't make them look nice and peaceful. It is very sad."

Andrea has been an undertaker for 30 years, just like his father before him. He says small things are usually important for the bereaved.

"Caressing their cheek one last time, holding their hand, and seeing them look dignified. Not being able to do that is so traumatic."

In this time of virus, undertakers are often forced to meet grieving families either side of a closed door.

Relatives still try to pass on handwritten notes, family heirlooms, drawings and poems in the hope they will be buried alongside their mother or father, brother or sister, son or daughter.

But not one of these things will be put in the coffins.



Burying personal items is now illegal. A drastic measure but one designed to stop the spread of the disease.

If someone dies at home, undertakers are still allowed inside - but they have to come in wearing full protective gear: glasses, masks, gloves, coats. It is a deeply distressing sight for someone who's just seen a loved one die.

But many undertakers are now in quarantine themselves. Some have had to close their business. A big worry is that those who handle the dead don't have sufficient masks or gloves.

"We have enough protective gear to keep us going for another week," says Andrea.

"But when we run out, we will not be able to operate. And we are one of the biggest funeral homes in the country. I can't even imagine how the rest are coping."

Emergency national law has now banned funeral services in Italy to prevent the spread of the virus. This is unprecedented for a country with such strong Roman Catholic values.


At least once a day, Andrea buries a body and not even one person shows up to say goodbye - because everyone is in quarantine.

"One or two people are allowed to be there during burial, but that's all," Massimo says. "No-one feels able to say a few words, and so it is just silence."

Whenever he can, he tries to avoid that. So he drives to a church with the coffin in the car, opens the boot, and asks a priest to perform a blessing there and then.

It is often done in seconds. And then the next person awaits.

A country inundated with coffins
Italy's mortuary industry is overwhelmed and the number of dead keeps rising. Almost 7,000 people have been killed by the virus so far (24 March) - more than any other country in the world.

"There's a queue outside our funeral home in Cremona," says Andrea. "It's almost like a supermarket."

Hospital morgues in northern Italy are inundated.

"The chapel at the hospital in Cremona looks more like a warehouse," says Massimo.

Caskets are piling up in churches. In Bergamo, which has the highest number of cases in Italy, the military has had to step in because the city's cemeteries are now full.

One night last week, locals watched in silence as a convoy of army trucks slowly drove more than 70 coffins through the streets.

Each one contained the body of a friend or neighbor being taken to a nearby city to be cremated. Few images have been more shocking or poignant since the outbreak began.

Doctors and nurses across the country have been hailed as heroes, saviors in Italy's darkest hour. But funeral directors have not received recognition for what they too are doing.

"Many people see us as mere transporters of souls," Massimo sighs.

He says many Italians look at their work in the way they view that of Charon, the sinister mythological ferryman of the underworld who carries the souls of the newly deceased across a river dividing the world of the living from the world of the dead.

A thankless and unthinking task in the eyes of many.

"But I can assure you that all we want is to give dignity to the dead."

#Andratuttobene - "everything is going to be ok" - is a hashtag that has been trending in Italy since the crisis erupted. It's accompanied by a rainbow emoji.

But at the moment there is no sunshine in sight. And although all pray for it, no-one knows exactly when everything will indeed be ok once again.

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Credit: BBC

LONDON COULD RUN OUT OF INTENSIVE CARE BEDS IN FOUR DAY AND THE WHOLE COUNTRY IN TWO WEEKS. WEAKER PATIENTS ARE ALLOWED TO DIE IN A BIT TO SAVE OTHERS. NURSE TELLS STAFF

Credit: Reuters


London could run out of intensive care beds in four days with the whole of the country using them up in two weeks.

One nurse says that staff is already allowing weaker patients to die in a bid to save others from the coronavirus outbreak.

Staff at the Northwick Park hospital in Harrow told The Daily Telegraph that doctors are rationing care to those most likely to survive.

The senior nurse said that shortages are forcing staff to make decisions about people's care and medical workers have built a new six-bed car ward because the site has run out of space.


'We’re already in an Italy situation where the doctors are deciding who should be put on the ventilators, and who should not,' the nurse said. 'Most of the people who passed away have been elderly with various comorbidities, but we also have younger people struggling to breathe, and they will sometimes get the ventilators first.'

The nurse also said that there aren't enough people to operate machines and that even staff with flulike symptoms are coming in because there's nobody else to care for the patients of the Covid-19 crisis. 

It comes after a University of Cambridge study assessed how different regions of England are coping and modeled how their level of ICU units will cope with the imminent influx of COVID-19 patients. 

Researchers claim five out of seven commissioning regions in England will have more critically ill COVID-19 patients than they can treat within two weeks. 

All of England — except for the North East and Yorkshire and the North West — will run out of ICU beds in two weeks' time, the study predicts.

London is the most severely affected and ICU beds are expected to run out in the capital before anywhere else in the country. 

According to the latest figures, England has recorded 390 deaths, with the UK total today hitting 422. 

More than 8,000 cases have now been confirmed and the UK's death toll has risen almost six-fold in the space of a week, with just 71 fatalities recorded last Tuesday.

The research has not yet been peer-reviewed, where it is scrutinized by other academics, but has been released online to help inform clinical practitioners. 

Intensive care beds are needed to treat people exhibiting severe symptoms of the novel coronavirus and require around the clock care and are reliant on a ventilator. 

The damning prediction comes as a study claims ICU nurses are spread thin as the coronavirus burden on the NHS increases. 

The healthcare professionals are having to look after six patients each, as opposed to the normal 1:1 care administered in the specialist units. 

'If mechanical ventilation cannot be provided to patients who need it, they will die,' says Dr. Ari Ercole from the Division of Anaesthesia at the University of Cambridge. 

'ICU capacity is a crucial concern as additional capacity takes time to create both in terms of staffing and equipment.' 

The team took data on cases of coronavirus provided by Public Health England and compared it with patterns of epidemiological spread in Italy.

Italy is now considered the epicenter of the pandemic as it has had the most deaths of anywhere in the world. 

More people have died in Italy than in China, despite having fewer cases.

Doctors say this is because the spike in cases rapidly overwhelmed the healthcare system and made it impossible to administer suitable care to all. 

After creating a complex computer model to predict the spread of the disease in England, it was revealed that by April 6, all regions will have full intensive care units, except for the North East and Yorkshire as well as the North West.  

And by this date, these two regions will be seeing bed occupancy rates of around 90 and 80 percent, respectively. 

'If our assumptions are correct, ICU capacity may be completely overwhelmed very quickly in England,' added Dr. Ercole, who is also a Fellow in Clinical Medicine at Magdalene College. 

'A large increase in ICU capacity is required extremely urgently if we are to be able to treat patients with life-threatening COVID-19 in the near future.'

The predictions were posted online alongside the model and the paper but the academics acknowledge the model makes a number of assumptions and may not be entirely accurate, but is based on the best data available at the time of publication.  

Dr. Ari Ercole told MailOnline these predictions had been made before Boris Johnson's address to the nation introducing effective lockdown and strict restrictions on movement. 

However, in the paper, the researchers write that expanding intensive care capacity in the country is extremely difficult due to the complexity of the machines.  

Dr. Ecole said: '[The study] doesn't take into account the capacity that the government believes possible with its proposed measures. 

'However, if our numbers are correct it does suggest that those measures need to be implemented and realized very urgently and this will be a substantial challenge.' 

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Credit: Dailymail UK 
By JOE PINKSTONE FOR MAILONLINE

Sunday, March 22, 2020

SEVEN-MONTH-OLD BOY BECOMES YOUNGEST IN THE U.S. TO TEST POSITIVE FOR CORONAVIRUS

Credit: Emmett Doster

A South Carolina mother has shared her baby's battle against coronavirus in a desperate Facebook appeal where she warned COVID-19 can strike the very young.

Courtney Watts Doster shared images of her sick seven-month-old son Emmett Wednesday - the youngest person to test positive in the country.

It's unclear where the baby contracted coronavirus but Doster's mother was in close proximity with her child before she knew she was ill.

'COVID19 isn't a joke. This isn't time to go out and have play dates, or go to Walmart, or go out to eat. Stay home people please!' Doster posted on Facebook Wednesday.

Doster – a married mother-of-three – was alarmed when Emmett developed a high fever on Monday but she wasn't sure whether the baby could be tested for COVID-19.


After several hours of talking to the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (DHEC) and Prisma Health hospital on the phone, she was able to get him a test at Urgent Care.

Later that day Emmett's temperature spiked and he spent the night in the hospital.

'Nothing worse than your 7-month-old running 104 fever, being poked and prodded over and over, and then being told he's positive,' Doster continued in a Facebook post-Wednesday. 'He has pneumonia which is the most severe form of this virus. Please read and learn facts....the CDC among other medical sites have tons of info!'

The results came back positive on Tuesday and now Doster is worried about her children aged two and four.

Courtney Watts Doster got her son Emmett tested Monday. She's pictured with her husband (right) and two other children aged two and four. Now she's worried about their risk too

By Wednesday she said, 'Emmett was feeling much better'.

'I did notice tonight he was easily winded if he jumped too much or played a little hard. You could tell he didn't feel as well right before bed! But he has been fever free without meds since around 1pm yesterday!' Doster continued.

The mother added in another social media post-Saturday that everyone needs to take the virus seriously, whether old or young.

It was as in the United States over 25,400 were confirmed to be infected and there were more than 300 coronavirus related deaths.

While the vulnerable are often classed as the elderly and those with certain underlying illnesses, such as diabetes or heart issues, advice has changed over time as more and more young people who tested positive had died or become severely ill from COVID-19.

The mother appealed for people not to be selfish in their ways, even if they believe they are not particularly vulnerable to the illness.

After her own mother was unknowingly a carrier, Doster urged others to think about how they could be harming strangers or someone they love.

'This is my PSA! Please take heed to these warnings. Stay inside. Don't go out to eat or to the park or to the bars. As much as it sucks to be at home, remember this.....IT'S NOT ABOUT JUST YOU! Stay home for your elderly parents or grandparents, or your immunocompromised sister, the newborn baby next door!' Doster wrote online. 

'The more we stay home, wash our hands, and listen to the president or our governors, the CDC, etc the quicker this will be over and we can get back to somewhat normal lives. This virus is putting healthy, young, 30 something-year-olds in the ICU! More and more children and infants will contract this virus. And more and more will need to be in the ICU on ventilation.

I have also experienced my oldest at just 2 years old hooked up to a ventilator from an extremely high fever that caused a complex febrile seizure. That was the scariest day of my life. I want to never experience it again and I don't want any other mamas to have to! So please, please stay at home.'

She added Emmett is home safe and resting but 'we know it can change in a matter of minutes'.

Doster added in a FaceTime call with WISTV: 'It’s very, very scary not to know -- could he make a turn for the worse tonight and just not be able to breathe. I’ve noticed him coughing more than he did in the beginning and so that’s very scary.' 

The family has been told to quarantine until at least April 1. 


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Credit: DailyMail

DONALD TRUMP ADMITS CORONAVIRUS IS HURTING HIS FAMILY BUSINESS AND WON'T RULE OUT SEEKING GOVERNMENT ASSISTANCE FOT HIS COMPANY AFTER MAR-A-LAGO CLOSED AND HIS GOLF COURSES SHUTTERED

Credit: Donald Trump



President Donald Trump won't rule out accepting government assistance for his Trump Organization after the company closed Mar-a-Lago, fired staff, and even shut down the bars at its Washington D.C. luxury hotel in the wake of the coronavirus.  'I don't know. I mean, I just don't know what the government assistance would be for what I have. I have hotels. Everybody knew I had hotels when I got elected. They knew I was a successful person when I got elected so it's one of those things,' he said Saturday at his daily coronavirus briefing. The administration is working on a financial rescue package for workers and businesses affected by the disease.

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PUTIN SENDS RUSSIAN MILITARY VIROLOGISTS TO BATTLE CORONAVIRUS IN ITALY AS DEATH TOLL RISES NEARLY 800 IN 24HRS.

Russian specialists preparing an Ilyushin IL-76 transport aircraft of Russian Defense Ministry for departure to Italy at the Chkalovsky military airport outside Moscow today



Russia is flying eight mobile teams of military virologists and doctors to Italy today to help tackle the deadly coronavirus crisis.

Italian premier Giuseppe Conte accepted Vladimir Putin's offer of armed forces personnel, vehicles, and equipment.

Russia will also send about 100 military specialists in virology and epidemics, the Interfax news agency cited the defense ministry as saying. 

It comes as the death toll in Italy from the contagion sweeping the globe rose by 793 to 4,825 yesterday and the Italian government imposed more stringent lockdown measures.

The Lombardy region, which has been the hardest-hit area in Italy, imposed even tougher lockdown measures as deaths continued to soar.   

Putin spoke to Conte on Saturday, the Kremlin said, adding that the Russian leader had offered his support and help in the form of mobile disinfection vehicles and specialists to aid the worst-hit Italian regions. 

Russian military virologists and medics have been sent o Italy to help battle coronavirus and try to bring down the death toll


                   Russia will also send about 100 military specialists in virology and epidemics (pictured above)


The Russian Defence Ministry said that military transport planes would deliver eight mobile brigades of military medics, special disinfection vehicles, and other medical equipment to Italy from Sunday.

The Lombardy region has introduced stricter restrictions, banning all exercise, even solitary sport, as the use of all vending machines was also prohibited.

Construction sites have also been shut down and markets closed. All factories not producing essential goods have also been shuttered. 

In Italy, all retailers, except pharmacies, food shops, post offices, and banks were closed weeks ago as a drastic lockdown was imposed.

Lombardy is the worst-affected region in the country with 3,095 deaths and the northern region has been under lockdown since March 8.  

Putin's spokesman said its offer to help out NATO member Italy was 'humanitarian'.

A spokesman for Russian defense minister Sergei Shoigu: 'The Russian Aerospace Forces' military transport aircraft will jet eight mobile teams of military virologists and doctors, vehicles for aerosol disinfection of transport and territories, as well as medical equipment to the republic.' 

A Russian truck being loaded on to a plane to be sent to Italy at Chkalovsky military airport outside Moscow today

Kremlin Press Secretary Dmitry Peskov the pandemic was something every nation has to tackle.

He said: 'Italy is facing a totally severe epidemiological situation. 

'When taking a decision to help the Italian republic, Putin was primarily guided by humanitarian considerations.'

Italian defense minister Lorenzo Guerini 'expressed gratitude' to the Russian armed forces, said Moscow. 

Putin's move appears to show confidence that Russia is not facing an imminent mass spread of coronavirus. 

The Kremlin leader was quick to seal off his country's 2,615-mile border with China after the Wuhan outbreak.

President Vladimir Putin has said the virus is 'generally under control' in the country, and the government has promised to step up testing.

It also emerged Putin is being protected from infection around the clock with all of his staff undergoing mandatory testing and all workers involved in the presidents' events schedule were being tested. 

On Saturday Russia registered its first death of a patient infected with the coronavirus.

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GREECE CONFIRMS MIGRANT RESCUE ON STORMY MEDITERRANEAN SEA

O fficials in Greece have confirmed an ongoing search and rescue operation in the Mediterranean Sea east of Crete, following reports of a mi...