Amazon city scrambles to provide oxygen to COVID-19 patients

15, Jan 2021 | nepaltraveller.com
Source::AP

Hospital staff and relatives of COVID-19 patients rushed to provide facilities with oxygen tanks just flown into the Amazon rainforest’s biggest city as doctors chose which patients would breathe amid dwindling stocks and an effort to airlift some of them to other states.

SAO PAULO 
 
Hospital staff and relatives of COVID-19 patients rushed to provide facilities with oxygen tanks just flown into the Amazon rainforest’s biggest city as doctors chose which patients would breathe amid dwindling stocks and an effort to airlift some of them to other states.

As heavy rain poured down Thursday in Manaus, Rafael Pereira carried a small tank containing five cubic meters of oxygen for his mother-in-law at the 28 de Agosto hospital. He didn’t want to be interviewed because of his stress, but he looked relieved when the tank — which he said would aid her breathing for an additional two hours — was taken inside.

Health workers at the Hospital Universitario Getulio Vargas took empty cylinders to its oxygen provider in the hopes there would be some to retrieve. Usually, the provider picks up the cylinders and brings newly refilled ones. Despairing patients in overloaded hospitals waited as oxygen arrived to save some, but came too late for others. At least one of the cemeteries of Manaus, a city of 2.2 million people, had mourners lining up to enter and bury their dead. Brazilian artists, soccer clubs and politicians used their platforms to cry for help.The strain prompted Amazonas state’s government to say it would transport 235 patients who depend on oxygen but aren’t in intensive care units to five other states and the federal capital, Brasilia.
Local authorities recently called on the federal government to reinforce Manaus’ stock of oxygen. The city’s 14-day death toll is approaching the peak of last year’s first wave of the coronavirus pandemic, according to official data. In that first peak, Manaus consumed a maximum 30,000 cubic meters (about 1 million cubic feet) of oxygen per day, and now the need has more than doubled to nearly 70,000 cubic meters, according to White Martins. “Due to the strong impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, the consumption of oxygen in the city increased exponentially over the last few days in comparison with a volume that was already extremely high, Demand is much higher than anything predictable and ... continues to grow significantly.” The company added that Manaus’ remote location presents challenging logistics, requiring additional stocks to be transported by boat and by plane.

ALSO READ

UK Bans Travel From South America Over Brazil Variant Fears

Madrid Digs Way Out Of Post-Storm Garbage, Damaged Trees

Guidelines Prepared To Mobilize Volunteers In Disaster Management

Guideline Related To Health Safety Protocol Made Public

Heavy Snowfall Hits Sweden, Finland; Icy Temperatures Ahead

US Will Require All Arriving Passengers To Get COVID-19 Test

India Starts Shipping COVID-19 Vaccine To Cities

Florida Downplays Reports Of Medical Tourism For Vaccines

join our newsLetter

powered by : nepal traveller digital publication pvt. ltd

developed by : Web House Nepal