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HEALTH

Overwhelmed Paris hospitals ‘may soon be forced to turn patients away’ as Covid cases spiral

Paris hospitals are fast approaching saturation point because of snowballing Covid admissions and may be forced to turn patients away, top officials warned on Sunday.

Overwhelmed Paris hospitals 'may soon be forced to turn patients away' as Covid cases spiral
Photo: Christophe Archambault/AFP

“There’s a feeling of anger at finding oneself in a situation that will force you to do disaster medicine,” said senior Paris hospitals official Remi Salomon.

“In 10 days, 15 days or three weeks we may be overwhelmed,” he told the all-news channel BFMTV, pleading for a new lockdown, including for schools.

Also on Sunday, 41 hospital crisis directors put their names to an open letter saying: “We cannot remain silent without betraying the Hippocratic oath we once  made.”

Published in the weekly Journal du Dimanche, the letter said they were preparing for decisions on which patients should be granted access to intensive care.

“This triage will concern all patients, Covid and non-Covid, in particular for adult patients’ access to critical care,” they wrote.

They said they had “never known such a situation, even during the worst (terror) attacks suffered in recent years.”

They noted that such selections had already begun, with hospitals being forced to postpone surgical procedures.

“These cancellations will intensify in the coming days, with only vital emergencies being spared soon,” they warned.

Later on Sunday, Health Minister Olivier Véran met with the crisis officials, saying he was “acutely aware of the impact on ICUs and wishes to keep them at their maximum to avoid more and more terrible choices for care providers,” according to a member of his team.

The government may have to take “supplementary measures” soon, the source told AFP.

In the daily Le Monde, nine emergency room doctors demanded more accountability from the executive, writing in an op-ed: “By making care givers decide which patient should live and which patient should die, without stating it clearly, the government is shirking responsibility in a hypocritical way.

“It is time for the executive to clearly and publicly assume the health consequences of its political decisions.”

Salomon predicted in his BFMTV interview that pressure on hospitals will likely ease by May or June thanks to the vaccination drive, while adding that the third wave in France could be “the most violent… but probably the last”.

The Paris regional health authority ARS asked hospitals to set a goal of making 2,200 beds available for Covid patients.

An earlier target of 1,800 beds is expected to be exceeded within days.

France counts a total of 27,712 Covid patients currently in hospital, of whom 1,017 were admitted Sunday.

In the past 24 hours, 131 patients died of Covid in hospital, compared with 194 over the previous 24 hours.

Overall Covid deaths in France total 94,623.

Member comments

  1. Get you finger out Macron and show some backbone. Lock the country down. Forget about Easter and trying to save what’s left of your political career. People’s lives come first. Unfortunately one has to make hard decisions throughout their lives but you seem to be incapable of making any.

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CRIME

One dead, several injured in Paris suburb shooting

One person was killed and six injured overnight in a gritty northern Paris suburb in a shooting likely linked to drug trafficking, prosecutors and the mayor said Saturday.

One dead, several injured in Paris suburb shooting

The attack in a parking lot near a cultural centre at Sevran, which lies between central Paris and the city’s main airport Charles de Gaulle, took place around 11:45 pm (2145 GMT) Friday, prosecutors said.

Upon arriving on the scene, police found four injured people strewn on the ground. One died soon after and the three others were taken to hospitals in a serious condition, a police source said.

Three more people injured by bullets were later taken to hospital, the source said, adding that two men had arrived in the parking lot in a car and one of them got out and opened fire.

The attackers then fled.

Sevran mayor Stephane Blanchet told AFP “it was clearly a settling of scores linked to drug trafficking.”

“There is a need to establish order and eradicate trafficking,” he said. “Those idiots fired live bullets and did not heed appeals for calm”.

Police have opened an investigation into intentional homicide by an organised gang, they said. No arrests had been by Saturday morning.

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