The Wall Street Journal - 28.03.2020 - 29.03.2020

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A12| Saturday/Sunday, March 28 - 29, 2020 **** THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.


“It is unfortunately not yet
possible to do that via holo-
gram,” said Olaf Scholz, the
vice chancellor.
Austria plans for Chancellor
Sebastian Kurz’s entire inner
circle to quarantine together if
someone close to him tests
positive.
Despite being sick, Mr.
Johnson spoke to Mr. Trump
by phone Friday. The presi-
dent wished Mr. Johnson a

quick recovery, Downing
Street said.
Mr. Johnson noticed he had
mild symptoms, including a
cough and a fever, on Thurs-
day afternoon and was tested
shortly after. He then stood
outside his official residence
at 10 Downing Street to par-
ticipate in countrywide ap-
plause of the National Health
Service, standing a few feet
away from the country’s chan-

cellor of the exchequer. Mr.
Johnson was informed at mid-
night he had the virus.
Under U.K. health guidance,
a person who is infected must
self-isolate for a week to allow
the virus to subside. Any peo-
ple living in the same house-
hold as that person must iso-
late for two weeks, as it can
take days for signs of infection
to show.
The British government has

Medical personnel prepared to evaluate a patient who arrived in an ambulance at a hospital in Brescia, Italy, this past week.

THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC


Italy’s Slow Progress Is Warning to West


One of the most


draconian lockdowns


hasn’t stamped out


the virus entirely


Patients were treated in an emergency temporary overflow hospital building set up to ease the pressure on the health-care system in Brescia, Italy, onMonday.

FRANCESCA VOLPI FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL (2)

Doctors in Brescia, a north-
ern Italian town at the center of
the country’s new coronavirus
pandemic, have seen glimmers
of hope in their battle against
the disease in recent days.
The virus has killed more
than 1,000 people there and the
number of infected admitted to
its large hospital is beginning
to decline, down by half to 50 a
day, suggesting the extreme
lockdown imposed on the pop-
ulation could be working.
But local officials believe
the true number of those in-
fected with the virus is per-
haps six times the official fig-
ure of 7,305. And they are
taking new steps: Those dis-
charged from hospital but still
positive for the virus are sent
to temporary quarantine facili-
ties for two weeks before re-
turning home, a measure grad-
ually being introduced
elsewhere in the country.
More than two weeks after
Italy enacted a nationwide
quarantine that remains the
most drastic in the West—peo-
ple are largely barred from
leaving their homes—the
growth of new infections is
slowing to single-digit percent-
age increases each day, lower
on average than a week ago.
However, progress is un-
even and slow, with an addi-
tional 919 people dying on Fri-
day, the highest one-day total
since the outbreak began. That
brought the total in Italy to
9,134 dead of the disease, the
most in the world.
More than 86,000 people in
Italy have tested positive for
the virus so far. But the head
of Italy’s emergency services
said up to 650,000 Italians
may have been infected, many
of them asymptomatic, mean-
ing that even tighter quaran-
tine measures could fail to
stop the spread.
The country’s experience—
which has served as the tem-
plate for the lockdowns
throughout much of the West
and which followed several
weeks of more-limited quaran-
tines in the country’s north—
shows that such measures are
very slow to produce results
and ultimately could fail to
stamp out the virus entirely.
That is instructive for other
countries that must decide
how hard to clamp down on
their populations, and how to
calculate the attendant eco-
nomic damage. At the mo-
ment, the U.S. has a patchwork
of policies, while most of Eu-
rope is under some form of a
lockdown.
“The restrictions had a big
impact. It’s the only thing that
allowed us to survive,” said
Alessandro Triboldi, head of
Brescia Poliambulanza Hospi-
tal. “But we need to get into
our heads that we’re in this
for the long haul.”


“In China, it took two
months of complete closure to
go down to zero contagions.
What’sbeendoneheresofar
has helped save [the northern
region of] Lombardy but it’s
not over yet,” he said.
China’s Zhejiang province
reported one new domestic in-
fection on Thursday.
Italy enacted its first lock-
down measures on Feb. 22,
quarantining 11 towns at the
center of the initial clusters of
infections in the northern re-
gions of Lombardy and the Ve-
neto. But much of the country
continued normally. Some 40%
of those leaving their homes
before the virus’s arrival were
still doing so regularly before
a recent tightening of the
rules, according to mobile-
phone location data cited by
officials.

On March 10, the govern-
ment extended restrictions to
the whole country. Residents
can leave their homes only to
buy food or medicine or seek
medical care. Violators face
fines of up to €3,000 ($3,900)
or jail time.
Italy’s lockdown still isn’t
as strict as China’s and the
country hasn’t adopted the ag-
gressive tactics that helped
stop the virus in Wuhan,
where the pandemic is
thought to have originated.
There, mild or suspected
cases—including healthy rela-
tives of those infected—were
placed in makeshift quarantine
centers in hotels and schools.
Doctors treating coronavirus
patients were separated from
their families. By contrast, in
Italy, those with mild symp-
toms have so far been told to

self-isolate at home, and are
rarely tested for the virus.
Chinese authorities pro-
vided Wuhan with doctors,
food and other supplies to get
through the quarantine, a sce-
nario impossible to replicate
in Italy, because the virus has
spread nationwide.
Italy’s experience shows that
Western-style lockdowns that
don’t involve the coercive mea-
sures of Wuhan may have to be
maintained for longer than
Western societies are willing to
tolerate to see results.
“The issue is whether you
can sustain a lockdown for the
time it takes to work—three,
four, five, six months or lon-
ger—while the economy goes
south,” said Gabor Kelen, di-
rector of the Department of
Emergency Medicine at Johns
Hopkins Medicine.

Frustration with the lock-
down has drawn attention to a
push by authorities in the Ve-
neto, the region east of Lom-
bardy, to launch a mass-testing
campaign as a way of control-
ling outbreaks and eventually
loosening quarantines.
Indeed, the experience of
the small town of Vo’ Euganeo
has shown that extensive test-
ing coupled with a lockdown
can help tame the virus more
quickly than just containment.
Vo’ had Italy’s first death at-
tributed to the coronavirus.
Lucia Menaldo, owner of an
eyeglasses store in Vo’, was in-
credulous when she learned on
Feb. 22 that authorities were
placing the entire town of
3,400 people under a hard
quarantine with no one al-
lowed in or out.
“Initially people were mad.

Jair Bolsonaro. More than 20
members of the delegation
later tested positive. Mr. Bol-
sonaro, who has been playing
down the dangers of the epi-
demic, has since said that his
test came back negative.
Most leaders have asked
citizens to stop shaking hands
and quarantine as soon as
they experience symptoms,
but not all have led by exam-
ple. Mark Rutte, the Dutch
premier, held a press confer-
ence on March 10 to announce
that everyone must stop shak-
ing hands and instead use
greetings such as bumping el-
bows—yet during the address
he shook hands with an aide.
In late February, as the vi-
rus took hold in the U.K., Mr.
Johnson paid a visit to a hos-
pital, saying later he had
shaken hands with patients.
On March 11, he met with
Queen Elizabeth II.
Pedro Sánchez, the Spanish
prime minister, refused to go
into quarantine after his wife
tested positive on March 15.
After a doctor who had
given her a pneumonia vaccine
tested positive, Ms. Merkel re-
treated to her modest apart-
ment overlooking Berlin’s Mu-
seum Island, which she shares
with her husband.
She chaired a cabinet meet-
ing on Monday by telephone.
In the cabinet room, her min-
isters sat at a large round ta-
ble, preserving a distance of
about 6 feet between them,
according to a spokesman.

a hierarchy of ministers to re-
place Mr. Johnson if he can’t
perform his duties, of which
Foreign Secretary Dominic
Raab would be next in line, a
government spokesman said.
French lawmakers have
been among those hit hardest
by the epidemic. Some 30 law-
makers and staffers at the Na-
tional Assembly have tested
positive for the virus. As a re-
sult, France’s political parties
agreed to designate 20 mem-
bers who lived close to the
grand riverside palace to rep-
resent them and vote on be-
half of the 557 not present.
The house also postponed all
nonessential bills.
The Spanish parliament al-
lowed remote voting in 2011,
but speeches can be made only
“personally and aloud” in the
House. So this past week, Mr.
Sánchez addressed a near-
empty chamber to request a
15-day extension of the state
of emergency, with 307 of 350
deputies voting online.
Last week, the Swiss federal
assembly, founded in 1500,
moved to allow its 200 legisla-
tors to convene by video or
telephone. And on March 20,
the European Parliament, the
European Union’s legislative
body, changed its own rules to
allow members to vote on bills
and motions by email, attach-
ing a photo of their ballot.
—Laurence Norman
in Brussels and Xavier
Fontdegloria in Barcelona
contributed to this article.

demonstrates the difficulties
of leadership, which demands
personal meetings with senior
aides and displays of public
reassurance, while conforming
to public guidelines to limit
contact with others. Many
leaders have failed to follow
their own government advice.
Government offices and leg-
islatures around the world are
often housed in archaic build-
ings that push policy makers
into proximity. The British
government is run from a war-
ren of interconnected old
buildings around Downing
Street in central London that
serve as residences for the
prime minister and others,
and as offices for other minis-
ters and senior civil servants.
Several other leaders, in-
cluding President Trump,
Chancellor Angela Merkel of
Germany and Canadian Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau, who
were in close contact with
people with the infection, have
so far tested negative.
Mr. Trump was tested after
he hosted a dinner at his Flor-
ida resort for a delegation
around Brazilian President


Continued from page A


Johnson


Tests


Positive


U.K. Prime Minister Johnson said on Instagram that he is self-isolating after testing positive for the virus.

How could you not be when you
see military and police road-
blocks keeping you from leaving
town?” she said. “Now we know
that those roadblocks saved us.”
As Vo’ fell under quaran-
tine, Andrea Crisanti, a micro-
biology professor and infec-
tious-diseases expert at the
nearby University of Padua,
saw an opportunity. He had
developed a test for the coro-
navirus by mid-January using
information made public by
Chinese doctors.
Dr. Crisanti oversaw the
testing of 95% of the residents
of Vo’ in the days after the
first infection was reported.
He found that 3% of the popu-
lation had been infected and
that just under half of those
who tested positive were as-
ymptomatic.
When everybody was tested
two weeks later, the rate of in-
fection had fallen to 0.1% with
only eight new infections, all
of whom lived with previously
infected people. “The main les-
son from Vo’ is that when you
have a cluster of infected peo-
ple, you should do a very ag-
gressive lockdown and then
test as many people as possi-
ble,” Dr. Crisanti said.

Nationwidelockdown

New cases

Deaths

Hoping for the Peak
Italyiswaitingtoseeif
coronavirusinfectionsand
deathswillstarttodecline.

New confirmed coronavirus
cases and deaths

Source: Italian government

Note: Through March 27

6,

0

2,

4,

March 1 10 20

BYERICSYLVERS
ANDMARGHERITASTANCATI

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