Tuesday, March 17, 2020

How Italy Got It So Wrong With Wuhan Virus?



Italy thought it was under control until Patient One showed up. The country's first known cases were two visitors from Wuhan, in China. Detected on January 29, they were placed in isolation in a hospital in Rome and the wheels of a national response began to grind forward.

The next day, Italy was the first European state to block all flights to and from China and Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte declared his country's emergency response "the most rigorous in Europe". But a local outbreak was already taking hold.

Two weeks after Conte's bold words, a 38-year-old man known only as Mattia — who in the days prior had socialised with friends and competed in a fun run — saw his GP in Codogno complaining of a flu.

On February 16 and then again on February 18, he visited the 24-hour casualty department of the local hospital and was turned away both times with instructions for bed rest. On neither occasion was he tested for the virus.

It was only after he returned at 3:00am the following day, now experiencing difficulty breathing, that alarm bells began to ring. He was tested 24 hours later and on February 21 a positive diagnosis was returned. Italy now had its first known local transmission. In the press, the man was dubbed Patient One.


Road blocks were placed around Codogno in an effort to contain the outbreak of coronavirus there, but it was too late.  So-called red zones were draped over Codogno and 10 other villages in the north of the country and curfews were introduced for bars and restaurants in Lombardy.

When he learned of the sequence of events, Conte fumed. In a television interview, the Prime Minister said: "We know that the way one hospital facility was managed was not entirely appropriate … [and] that certainly contributed to the spread."

Now, the death toll has spiked to more than 2,500, with almost 28,000 people diagnosed with the disease. On Sunday alone, 368 people died from coronavirus in Italy. On Monday that figure was 349. On Tuesday it was 345.


At the centre of the pandemic is Bergamo — Italy's most infected city — which is now home to apocalyptic scenes. The city's crematorium is running on a new 24-hour schedule. Newspaper L'Eco di Bergamo is running 10 pages of obituaries; it normally prints just one.

Bergamo anaesthetist Christian Salaroli told daily newspaper Corriere della Sera that the hospitals were so overwhelmed, and the supply of respirators so inadequate, doctors were having to choose who receives treatment.

"We decide depending on their age and the condition of their health," he said. Watching in horror, many around the world are now wondering how Italy got it so spectacularly wrong?





Italy is one of the nations worst hit by the global coronavirus pandemic, with more than 90,000 confirmed cases as of Sunday and more than 10,000 deaths. As a scholar in the field of security and emergency management who has studied and worked in Italy, I have determined that there are at least five major reasons why the country is suffering so much.

1. Lots of old people

Italians have the sixth-longest life expectancy in the world – 84-years. That means lots of Italians are elderly: In 2018, 22.6 per cent of its population was 65 or over, among the highest proportions in Europe.

Medical researchers have said the coronavirus poses a more serious threat to older people than to younger ones. Older people are more likely to contract the COVID-19 disease and, mostly, to have a more severe case of it. That can also increase the demand for hospitals’ intensive-care units.

Many older Italians may have been also exposed to the virus in the workplace; in 2019 the average Italian retirement age was expected to be 67, at least two years later than average retirees in other Western developed nations.

2. Close proximity

Italians aren’t used to social distancing. They are very physically affectionate people: Hugs and cheek-kisses are common not just among family members but also friends and even work colleagues.
Even when they’re just chatting, Italians are closer together than many other people, because their culture’s psychological perception of personal space is smaller than in other countries. Large social gatherings, formerly common in public areas, were banned by Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte at the beginning of March.

3. Dense population

There isn’t a lot of space in Italy for people to spread out in. Italy is a densely populated country, with an average density of 205 people per square kilometre. In comparison, the United States has an average density of 33 people per square kilometre. Two-thirds of Italians live in urban areas that are even more dense. Rome has 2,232 people per square kilometre, and Milan packs about 7,550 people into every square kilometre.

4. Northern Italy is a business hub

Milan, in northern Italy, is the country’s financial capital, and has close trade and educational connections with China. The whole region of northern Italy is home to offices for many multinational corporations.

Workers travel from all over the world to attend meetings and conventions in northern Italy. An infected person not only could infect others, but those people could rapidly spread out across the entire country.

5. Massive number of cases

As of March 25, China was the only country registering more COVID-19 cases than Italy. With far fewer people, Italy’s infection rate is much higher than China’s. No other country has a truly comparable set of circumstances.

A key factor in emergency management is learning lessons from others in similar circumstances – but there is no one for Italy to learn from at this stage of the crisis. Chinese experts have travelled to Italy to help – but many of the lessons they are bringing only became clear after Italy’s outbreak began, so the Italians are behind where other countries, with more recent outbreaks, may be.

The Italian government has progressively worked to contain the disease, including declaring a total national lockdown on March 10. Italy has struggled – and is continuing to fight – against an unprecedented crisis that found dangerously fertile ground in elements of the country’s demographics, business, geography and culture.

But its people haven’t lost their social habits – just adapted them, and created perhaps a temporary new national motto: “Distanti ma uniti.” Distant, but united.