In photos: Ambulances race in Italy's COVID-hit Formula 1 city Monza
Nov 26, 20205:47 pm +03 +03:00
This Italian city north of Milan is best known for its Formula 1 racetrack.
AP Photo
But in 2020, ambulances have been doing most of the racing in Monza.
AP Photo
Over two days, the Monza-Brianza province of some 875,000 added 1,859 new cases, second only to neighboring Milan in Italy’s virus epicenter of Lombardy.
AP Photo
Ambulance duty is essentially COVID-19 duty: 70% of all calls are for people with the virus.
AP Photo
Many are quarantined at home after testing positive, and the ambulance calls go out as their condition deteriorates overnight, requiring hospitalization.
AP Photo
Paramedics wear protective gear to go into houses and after each call have to disinfect the ambulance, equipment and their clothes, all night long.
AP Photo
Some calls are false alarms: One man who had already recovered from COVID-19 called in a panic, convinced he had gotten sick again.
AP Photo
The ambulance drove him to a center to be tested. He was negative.
AP Photo
“We are always active. Obviously in this moment we have more calls – listen, there is a call coming in right now,‘’ said Cristina Valtorta, president of the White Cross section in the town of Biasonne.
AP Photo
Between calls, staff sleep in a room with three well-spaced cots.
AP Photo
The White Cross has just a handful of full-time employees, assisted by some 120 volunteers who take over night and weekend duty.
AP Photo
The service was founded by a priest, Luigi Bignami.
AP Photo
“Our motto is: Love your neighbor as yourself,” Valtorta said.
AP Photo
The situation in Monza has grown so critical this fall that the mayor made a desperate public plea for the army to help.
AP Photo
This week, 20 army doctors and nurses are set to arrive, allowing another 40 hospital beds to be set up at the main San Gerardo Hospital.
AP Photo
Other hospitals in the region also have answered officials’ calls for help, receiving patient transfers, which has eased the pressure on the city’s two main hospitals that are now treating some 400 people – down from over 500 a week ago.
AP Photo
Medical staffer Massimo Villa walks by as a patient is carried down the stairs of her house during a shift with the emergency White Cross in Cinisello Balsamo, near Monza, Italy, Nov. 20, 2020.
AP Photo
Medical staff member Ruggero Gariboldi is sanitized by his colleague Massimo Viila after treating a suspected COVID-19 patient during their shift with the emergency White Cross in Cinisello Balsamo, near Monza, Italy, Nov. 20, 2020.