German hospitals with spare capacity will take in at least 47
coronavirus patients from Italy in a sign of European solidarity,
Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said on Thursday.
“Because we stand by our Italian friends. We can only manage this together,” Maas said in a short statement.
In Italy, an overwhelmed health care system has witnessed the outbreak kill more people than in any other country.
Ahead
of an expected larger wave of domestic infections that German
authorities are preparing for, a first group of six Italian patients
arrived at Leipzig airport in the eastern state of Saxony on Tuesday.
The western state of North Rhine-Westphalia also announced plans to take 10 Italian patients in coming days.
As
of Wednesday, there were 36,508 cases of coronavirus in Germany, with
198 deaths, the Robert Koch Institute for infectious diseases said. That
compares with 74,386 confirmed cases in Italy, where 7,503 have died.
German
Health Minister Jens Spahn said earlier on Thursday that the country
was still in “the calm before the storm”, adding authorities were using
the time they had won with extensive testing to prepare for a wave of
cases expected in the coming weeks.
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