Latest Breaking News On - Emma pinedo gonzalez - Page 7 : comparemela.com
3 Min Read
LISBON (Reuters) - Portugal reported close to half of all its COVID-19 deaths in January, highlighting a severe acceleration in cases that has prompted several European nations to offer help.
FILE PHOTO: A patient is carried to the COVID-19 Intensive Care Unit (ICU) of Cascais Hospital, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Cascais, Portugal, January 27, 2021. REUTERS/Pedro Nunes
Hospitals across the nation of a little more than 10 million appear on the verge of collapse, with ambulances sometimes queuing for hours because of a lack of beds while some health units are struggling to find enough refrigerated space to preserve the bodies of the deceased.
Lisbon
Lisboa
Portugal
Germany
United-kingdom
Waldersee
Sachsen-anhalt
Madrid
Spain
Austria
Berlin
Britain
FILE PHOTO: A patient is carried to the COVID-19 Intensive Care Unit (ICU) of Cascais Hospital, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Cascais
LISBON (Reuters) – Portugal reported close to half of all its COVID-19 deaths in January, highlighting a severe acceleration in cases that has prompted several European nations to offer help.
Hospitals across the nation of a little more than 10 million appear on the verge of collapse, with ambulances sometimes queuing for hours because of a lack of beds while some health units are struggling to find enough refrigerated space to preserve the bodies of the deceased.
Austria is willing to take intensive-care patients and is waiting for Portuguese authorities to propose how many they want to transfer, the Austrian embassy in Lisbon said.
Portugal
Germany
Lisbon
Lisboa
United-kingdom
Waldersee
Sachsen-anhalt
Madrid
Spain
Austria
Berlin
Britain
By Caroline Copley and Annkathrin Weis
BERLIN/DILLENBURG, Germany (Reuters) - Proud of their national reputation for efficiency, Germans are growing increasingly frustrated by the slow rollout of a COVID-19 vaccine its scientists helped develop.
Scarce vaccine supply, cumbersome paperwork, a lack of healthcare staff and an aged and immobile population are hampering efforts to get early doses of a vaccine made by U.S.-based Pfizer and German partner BioNTech into the arms of the people.
Germany has set up hundreds of vaccination centres in sports halls and concert arenas and has the infrastructure to administer up to 300,000 shots a day, Health Minister Jens Spahn said.
Germany
United-states
United-kingdom
Israel
Madrid
Spain
Berlin
Saxony
Sachsen
Dillenberg
Hessen
Britain
vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.