Italy is on
the front lines of the COVID-19 virus in Europe. Reported cases as of yesterday rose to almost
25,000 with around 1,800 deaths. The
country has been on a near total lock down for almost a week, after a partial
lock down in Lombardia (which includes
Milan) and surrounding areas failed to stanch the logarithmic explosion of
cases. Still the virus rages.
Silvia
Merler, the head of research at the Algebris Policy and Research Forum in Turin,
has posted on Twitter a sobering coronavirus lag tracker which compares the
viral progression in Lombardia against
that in Wuhan, as well as the progression in Italy against that in China. The acceleration is nearly identical. Building on that, Ms. Mercer tracked
infection rates in other EU countries, as well as the US (despite incomplete data). They all follow the China/Italian model,
which gives us an idea of how long we have to shut everything down except supermarkets,
pharmacies, and health system points of service before the cases explode.
If Ms.
Merler’s analysis is correct, Germany is about nine days behind Italy and the
U.S. is about 16 days behind. Because of
the paucity of U.S. testing data, I expect the U.S. has many more cases than reported,
and therefore likely fewer than 16 days to get its shit together. Here is a link to the lag tracker, which is
updated daily: Algebris
Lag Tracker
We
generally head to Italy in April and return to Berlin in early June. Not this year. To keep up with people I care about who live
there, I’ve been in contact by phone, email, and WhatsApp with friends in
Tuscany, Umbria, and Palermo. Here are
their dispatches from the front lines.
A.I. FROM
PALERMO
February
26: Hi dear. Here we are in a panic. By you?
You can’t find masks or hand sanitizer here.
February
27*: Ciao, how are you? How is it there? Here we’re in a total lock down. It seems like the Cold War. My son should
have returned from London, he got a job in Taormina, but he remains stuck
there. They won’t let him come
home. Here there is no one in the streets,
neither on foot nor in cars. It’s
totally surreal. We hope this doesn’t reach
you, at least not at this level. We’re
OK but in total isolation, everyone shut up in his own house. But take this seriously. This virus is deadly.
*Note the
date. This total lock down was the writing on the wall, and it was imposed 14 days before Trump banned travel to the U.S. from
certain EU states, including Italy. In other words, until March 11, Trump
did nothing at all to keep Americans safe except ban travel into the U.S. from China on January
31. Are you getting this? Nothing. Zero.
Today: Ciao, cara.
We’re still completely isolated at home.
I’m working from home [she teaches violin at a music school]
via video calls with my students. My
mother [who has dementia] no longer goes to the senior center. I alternate her care with her caretaker. I am concerned for my son, who is stuck in
London where everything is very confused and he’s at risk, given that he works
in the hospitality industry. We tried to
contact our government minister but couldn’t reach her. Here Musumeci [a minister] has cut off all
connections between Sicily and the mainland.
The situation is absurd.
Psychologists call and offer appointments for psychological problems
resulting from this isolation. My mother
is well but she wants to go out. She
doesn’t understand. And let’s not even
talk about the economic aspects. A catastrophe. How are you?
L.S. FROM
PALERMO
March
15, via phone: The city is on total lock down. The police are everywhere. I can't circulate within the city by
car, bus, bicycle, or on foot unless I self-certify to a policeman in writing
that I am either going to the supermarket or on a trip for health reasons (the
pharmacy, the doctor, or the hospital). I
go out in the early morning in my running clothes with my yoga mat and the police let me walk to the Foro
Italico, where I can do yoga alone, because it's for health reasons, provided I return straightaway
by the same route. I heard some teenage
girls yesterday complaining about not being able to kiss and hug their friends, saying this was
impossible for a Sicilian. I said, "Get over it! Worry about dying."
M.T. FROM
PALERMO
March
16: Cara Marilyn e caro Steve,
Thank
you for your kind mail. My family and myself
are good and in good shape, no problem so far. We are lucky. Anyway we are all very worried, my sister
lives in Milan, she is a doctor and her partner too, they say that hospitals are
very busy, and all the health system is on the edge of collapse. Still it’s amazing to have a public health
system. My father (doctor as well) lives
in Trapani with my mum. Here in Sicily
the emergency is nothing like Milan, but there is a lot of attention, a lot of
police in the street and quite a lot of control.
I
feel that everybody is worried by this situation, it is very strange feeling
not being able move in our city or in Europe, but the quarantine is a very
necessary measure. And it’s by strange
not being able to have human connection, it will last a bit more, at least
until the 6th of April, but I believe until after Easter. Almost like this year has only 11 months, and
it’s a huge concern for all the business that are closed and will be closed for
some more weeks.
It
will great to see you again and hug again.
Please be safe in Berlin, avoid crowds and wear disposable gloves when
you go out if you can.
L.G. FROM
PALERMO
March
15: Dearest
Marilyn We're fine. We have been locked
in the house for five days, except for S. who goes to work, even if she will
practice Smart working from Monday. We resist and wait for the peak of the
virus to pass. Here, everything is closed except food and necessities. Thanks
for the thought and we reciprocate good wishes for you too. A hug for you and
Steve. See you soon.
S.P. FROM
A SMALL VILLAGE IN UMBRIA
March
8: Interesting article in NY Times about
how the disruption caused by the virus is making us rethink the benefits of
globalisation. I think Umbria has 16 cases and one full recovery. We are not so
far from the affected areas so we may get quarantined at some point. We have
€[XXX] in cash and plenty of pasta....Jeez, what a schamozzle (or however you
spell it) . Stay safe, guys xx.
Later, same day: Popped into Trestina today and saw
our first person sporting a mask. That was in the supermarket. Everything else
normal, but I expect to see TP changing hands on the black market shortly....
March
15: You have a balcony ? Start
singing...(probably not a very German thing to do..) L. still employed but at
home. Because we are out of town we can go walking, so we do. Weather is sunny
and 14C - 18C so we can get out and suffer less from cabin fever. L. was at the
supermarket this morning and still no sign of panic buying. They have pretty
much everything.
No
going to Serone [a local bar], though...except for ciggies apparently. Our hot
water system broke down, but will get repaired tomorrow..plumbers and
electricians can still work. Umbria doing well under the circumstances. Weirdly
quiet out there...so few cars you would think we were still in black and
white.
C.M. FROM OUR SMALL SETTLEMENT IN TUSCANY
March
16: Hello, in Valuberti everything is
normal, more or less; also health, at least we hope .... Here isolation and
"quarantine" have no effect and spring imposes the usual jobs,
vineyard, olive trees, grass, vegetable garden …..Let's hope to resist
the attack of the virus that especially hits the elderly, as if it were sent by
the bodies that provide pensions .....
S.B. FROM A NEIGHBORING SETTLEMENT
IN TUSCANY
March
15: Hi Marilyn,
We were very pleased that you thought of us. For now we are all well, in Castiglion Fiorentino only one case of illness has been recorded. We are not calm because the situation is serious, however at Fiume [the name of her settlement] we defend ourselves well from contagion. We hope everything goes well, also to you in Germany.
We were very pleased that you thought of us. For now we are all well, in Castiglion Fiorentino only one case of illness has been recorded. We are not calm because the situation is serious, however at Fiume [the name of her settlement] we defend ourselves well from contagion. We hope everything goes well, also to you in Germany.
That's S.'s grandfather above.
These first person reports below from doctors in the hardest hit regions
of Italy, published on March 16 in Huffpost, are frightening and touching:
DR. MARCO VERGANO, FROM TURIN
Told
HuffPost via email that it’s
“evident” to him that “acting like a community, rather than personally feeling
violated in individual freedom will be more difficult for Americans than for
Europeans.” Americans, Vergano said, “should stop believing that COVID-19 is a
‘bad flu’” and “stop circulating low quality information and ‘fake news.’” The
U.S. “should abandon woefully incompetent political leaders, that in an
unprecedented emergency like this can lead the country to a catastrophe,”
Vergano advised. “They should not panic; but in case restrictive measures are
difficult to enforce without panic, well... then a bit of ‘fruitful panic’ may
be useful!” He said Americans should take “advantage of the few weeks
between Italy and US.”
CRISTINA
HIGGINS FROM BERGAMO
Americans
and some Europeans “are weeks away from where we are today in Italy.
You
have a chance to make a difference and stop the spread in your country,”
Higgins wrote. “Push for the entire office to work at home today, cancel
birthday parties, and other gatherings, stay home as much as you can. If you
have a fever, any fever, stay home. Push for school closures, now. Anything you
can do to stop the spread, because it is spreading in your communities – there
is a two week incubation period – and if you do these things now you can buy
your medical system time.”
DR. DANIEL
MACCHINI FROM BERGAMO
…wrote
in a heartbreaking Facebook post that Italy has so many patients it’s
impossible to give all of them adequate care.
“The
display boards with the names of the sick, of different colors depending on the
operating unit they belong to, are now all red and instead of the surgical
operation there is the diagnosis, which is always the same cursed: bilateral interstitial pneumonia,” Macchini
wrote in her essay, according to a translation.
“The
epidemiological disaster is taking place. And there are no more surgeons,
urologists, orthopedists, we are only doctors who suddenly become part of a
single team to face this tsunami that has overwhelmed us,” Macchini wrote. “The
cases multiply, we arrive at the rate of 15-20 hospitalizations a day all for
the same reason. The results of the swabs now come one after the other:
positive, positive, positive. Suddenly the emergency room is
collapsing.”
Macchini
warned people to stay away from “the theater, museums or gym” and to have
“mercy on that myriad of older people you could exterminate. Please,
listen to us, try to leave the house only for indispensable things,” he added.
Yet not everything is quiet on the Italian front; not everything is sad and a little terrifying. The Italians are fighting back. They are fighting for their lives and their way of life. Instead of manning the barricades, they are manning the balconies. Listen to the DJ music, the arias, and
the banging pots and pans and look at the smart phones glowing as they declare their indomitable spirit via this video link balcony
musicians. VIVA ITALIA!
We need the Italians' irrepressible
joy and lust for life today, in this very moment, more than ever. But if we don't want the "All quiet on the Italian front" to engulf the German front, the French front, the American front, and on and on, then we simply must listen to what the Italians are desperately trying to tell us. Beneath the joie de vivre there is some very serious messaging going on: Time is running out. You must cancel everything NOW so we can
begin together again.
Keep it
real! Stay inside! Get tested!
Marilyn













Excellent read Lady M. I've been following the virus spread since early January and checked the news in the morning. Hubby thought I bonkers (which I might be...) and probably a bit cynical and pessimistic. Possibly so, but once it spread from China, it was only a matter of time. I feel the UK spread is growing the same rate as the States. We are a smaller country but it will be dire for everybody. Stay safe you two. Love from Essex xoxo
ReplyDeleteThank you, and than goodness Boris has taken a step back from doing nothing and banking on herd immunity. Keep safe! xx
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