For Europe, itâs wave after wave
By Jason Horowitz New York Times,Updated December 23, 2020, 2:01 a.m.
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Relatives touched each other s hand through a plastic film screen and a glass to avoid contracting COVID-19 at the San Raffaele center in Rome ahead of Christmas.Cecilia Fabiano/Associated Press
The coronavirus first smashed into Europe with a wave of infections that nearly broke its hospitals â exhausting, infecting and killing doctors and nurses. Lockdowns created some space in intensive care wards over the summer. But the reprieve was short-lived.
Since the fall, the Continent has watched with horror, and paralysis, as another wave struck with nearly equal force â and in some places far more. Hospital corridors were crammed again, respirators overloaded. As death rates spiked, governments imposed new, though watered-down, restrictions, hoping to salvage their economies while keeping the virus at bay.
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