Special Report: Italy and South Korea virus outbreaks reveal disparity
in deaths and tactics
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[March 13, 2020]
By Emilio Parodi, Stephen Jewkes, Sangmi Cha and Ju-min Park
MILAN/SEOUL (Reuters) - In Italy, millions
are locked down and more than 1,000 people have died from the
coronavirus. In South Korea, hit by the disease at about the same time,
only a few thousand are quarantined and 67 people have died. As the
virus courses through the world, the story of two outbreaks illustrates
a coming problem for countries now grappling with an explosion in cases.
It's impractical to test every potential patient, but unless the
authorities can find a way to see how widespread infection is, their
best answer is lockdown.
Italy started out testing widely, then narrowed the focus so that now,
the authorities don't have to process hundreds of thousands of tests.
But there's a trade-off: They can't see what's coming and are trying to
curb the movements of the country's entire population of 60 million
people to contain the disease. Even Pope Francis, who has a cold and
delivered his Sunday blessing over the internet from inside the Vatican,
said he felt "caged in the library."
Thousands of miles away in South Korea, authorities have a different
response to a similar-sized outbreak. They are testing hundreds of
thousands of people for infections and tracking potential carriers like
detectives, using cell phone and satellite technology.
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Both countries saw their first cases of the disease called COVID-19 in
late January. South Korea has since reported 67 deaths out of nearly
8,000 confirmed cases, after testing more than 222,000 people. In
contrast, Italy has had 1,016 deaths and identified more than 15,000
cases after carrying out more than 73,000 tests on an unspecified number
of people.
Epidemiologists say it is not possible to compare the numbers directly.
But some say the dramatically different outcomes point to an important
insight: Aggressive and sustained testing is a powerful tool for
fighting the virus.
Jeremy Konyndyk, a senior policy fellow at the Center for Global
Development in Washington, said extensive testing can give countries a
better picture of the extent of an outbreak. When testing in a country
is limited, he said, the authorities have to take bolder actions to
limit movement of people.
"I'm uncomfortable with enforced lockdown-type movement restrictions,"
he said. "China did that, but China is able to do that. China has a
population that will comply with that."
The democracies of Italy and South Korea are useful case studies for
countries such as America, which have had problems setting up testing
systems and are weeks behind on the infection curve. So far, in Japan
and the United States particularly, the full scale of the problem is not
yet visible. Germany has not experienced significant testing
constraints, but Chancellor Angela Merkel warned her people on Wednesday
that since 60% to 70% of the populace is likely to be infected, the only
option is containment.
South Korea, which has a slightly smaller population than Italy at about
50 million people, has around 29,000 people in self-quarantine. It has
imposed lockdowns on some facilities and at least one apartment complex
hit hardest by outbreaks. But so far no entire regions have been cut
off.
Seoul says it is building on lessons learned from an outbreak of Middle
East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) in 2015 and working to make as much
information available as possible to the public. It has embarked on a
massive testing program, including people who have very mild illness, or
perhaps don't even have symptoms, but who may be able to infect others.
This includes enforcing a law that grants the government wide authority
to access data: CCTV footage, GPS tracking data from phones and cars,
credit card transactions, immigration entry information, and other
personal details of people confirmed to have an infectious disease. The
authorities can then make some of this public, so anyone who may have
been exposed can get themselves - or their friends and family members -
tested.
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In addition to helping work out who to test, South Korea's data-driven
system helps hospitals manage their pipeline of cases. People found
positive are placed in self-quarantine and monitored remotely through a
smartphone app, or checked regularly in telephone calls, until a
hospital bed becomes available. When a bed is available, an ambulance
picks the person up and takes the patient to a hospital with air-sealed
isolation rooms. All of this, including hospitalization, is free of
charge.
South Korea's response is not perfect. While more than 209,000 people
have tested negative there, results are still pending on about 18,000
others - an information gap that means there are likely more cases in
the pipeline. The rate of newly confirmed cases has dropped since a peak
in mid-February, but the system's greatest test may still be ahead as
authorities try to track and contain new clusters. South Korea does not
have enough protective masks - it has started rationing them - and it is
trying to hire more trained staff to process tests and map cases.
And the approach comes at the cost of some privacy. South Korea's system
is an intrusive mandatory measure that depends on people surrendering
what, for many in Europe and America, would be a fundamental right of
privacy. Unlike China and the island-state of Singapore, which have used
similar methods, South Korea is a large democracy with a population that
is quick to protest policies it does not like.
"Disclosing information about patients always comes with privacy
infringement issues," said Choi Jaewook, a preventive medicine professor
at Korea University and a senior official at the Korean Medical
Association. Disclosures "should be strictly limited" to patients'
movements, and "it shouldn't be about their age, their sex, or their
employers."
Traditional responses such as locking down affected areas and isolating
patients can be only modestly effective, and may cause problems in open
societies, says South Korea's Deputy Minister for Health and Welfare Kim
Gang-lip. In South Korea's experience, he told reporters on Monday,
lockdowns mean people participate less in tracing contacts they may have
had. "Such an approach," he said, "is close-minded, coercive, and
inflexible."
ITALY "AT THE LIMIT"
Italy and South Korea are more than 5,000 miles apart, but there are
several similarities when it comes to coronavirus. Both countries' main
outbreaks were initially clustered in smaller cities or towns, rather
than in a major metropolis - which meant the disease quickly threatened
local health services. And both involved doctors who decided to ignore
testing guidelines.
Italy's epidemic kicked off last month. A local man with flu symptoms
was diagnosed after he had told medical staff he had not been to China
and discharged himself, said Massimo Lombardo, head of local hospital
services in Lodi.
The diagnosis was only made after the 38-year-old, whose name has only
been given as Mattia, returned to the hospital. Testing guidelines at
the time said it was not necessary to test people who had no link to
China or other affected areas. But an anaesthetist pushed the protocols
and decided to go ahead and test for COVID-19 anyway, Lombardo said.
Now, some experts in Italy believe Mattia may have been infected through
Germany, rather than China.
Decisions about testing hinge partly on what can be done with people who
test positive, at a time when the healthcare system is already under
stress. In Italy at first, regional authorities tested widely and
counted all positive results in the published total, even if people did
not have symptoms.
Then, a few days after the patient known as Mattia was found to have
COVID-19, Italy changed tack, only testing and announcing cases of
people with symptoms. The authorities said this was the most effective
use of resources: The risk of contagion seemed lower from patients with
no symptoms, and limited tests help produce reliable results more
quickly. The approach carried risks: People with no symptoms still can
be infected and spread the virus.
On the other hand, the more you test the more you find, so testing in
large numbers can put hospital systems under strain, said Massimo
Antonelli, director of intensive care at the Fondazione Policlinico
Universitario Agostino Gemelli IRCCS in Rome. Testing involves elaborate
medical processes and follow-up. "The problem is actively searching for
cases," he said. "It means simply the numbers are big."
Italy has a generally efficient health system, according to
international studies. Its universal healthcare receives funding below
the European Union average but is comparable with South Korea's, at 8.9%
of GDP against 7.3% in South Korea, according to the World Health
Organization.
Now, that system has been knocked off balance. Staff are being brought
into accident and emergency departments, holidays have been canceled and
doctors say they are delaying non-urgent operations to free up intensive
care beds.
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Medical workers wearing protective masks check patients at a
medical checkpoint at the entrance of the Spedali Civili hospital in
Brescia, Italy March 3, 2020. REUTERS/Flavio Lo Scalzo
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Pier Luigi Viale, head of the infectious disease unit at Sant'
Orsola-Malpighi hospital in Bologna, is working around the clock -
in three jobs. His hospital is handling multiple coronavirus cases.
His doctors are shuttling to other hospitals and clinics in the area
to lend their expertise and help out with cases. In addition, his
doctors also have to deal with patients with other contagious
diseases who are struggling to survive.
"If it drags on for weeks or months we'll need more reinforcements,"
he told Reuters.
Last week, the mayor of Castiglione d'Adda, a town of about 5,000
people in Lombardy's "red zone" which was the first to be locked
down, made an urgent online appeal for help. He said his small town
had had to close its hospital and was left with one doctor to treat
more than 100 coronavirus patients. Three of the town's four doctors
were sick or in self quarantine.
"Doctors and nurses are at the limit," said a nurse from the
hospital where Mattia was taken in. "If you have to manage people
under artificial respiration you have to be watching them
constantly, you can't look after the new cases that come in."
Studies so far suggest that every positive case of coronavirus can
infect two other people, so local authorities in Lombardy have
warned that the region's hospitals face a serious crisis if the
spread continues - not just for COVID-19 patients but also for
others whose treatment has been delayed or disrupted. As the crisis
spreads into Italy's less prosperous south, the problems will be
magnified.
Intensive care facilities face the most intense pressure. They
require specialist staff and expensive equipment and are not set up
for mass epidemics. In total, Italy has around 5,000 intensive care
beds. In the winter months, some of these are already occupied by
patients with respiratory problems. Lombardy and Veneto have just
over 1,800 intensive care beds between public and private systems,
only some of which can be set aside for COVID-19 patients.
The government has asked regional authorities to increase the number
of intensive care places by 50% and to double the number of beds for
respiratory and contagious diseases, while reorganizing staff
rosters to ensure adequate staffing. Some 5,000 respirators have
been acquired for intensive care stations, the first of which are
due to arrive on Friday, deputy Economy Minister Laura Castelli
said.
The region has already asked nursing institutes to allow students to
bring forward their graduation to get more nurses into the system
early. Pools of intensive care specialists and anaesthetists are to
be set up, including staff from outside the worst affected regions.
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To add to the burden, hospitals in Italy depend on medical personnel
to try to trace the contacts that people who test positive have had
with others. One doctor in Bologna, who asked not to be named, said
he had spent a 12-hour day tracing people who had been in contact
with just one positive patient, to ensure those who next need
testing are found.
"You can do that if the number of cases remains two to three," the
doctor said. "But if they grow, something has to give. The system
will implode if we continue to test everyone actively and then have
to do all this."
"MAXIMUM POWER"
In South Korea as in Italy, an early case of COVID-19 was identified
when a medical officer followed their intuition, rather than the
official guidelines, on testing.
The country's first case was a 35-year-old Chinese woman who tested
positive on Jan. 20. But the largest outbreak was detected after the
31st patient, a 61-year-old woman from South Korea's southeastern
city of Daegu, was diagnosed on Feb. 18.
Like the patient named Mattia in Italy, the woman had no known links
to Wuhan, the Chinese province where the disease was first
identified. And as in Italy, the doctors' decision to recommend a
test went against guidelines at the time to test people who had been
to China or been in contact with a confirmed case, said Korea
Medical Association's Choi Jaewook.
"Patient 31," as she became known, was a member of a secretive
church which Deputy Minister for Health and Welfare Kim Gang-lip
said has since linked to 61% of cases. Infections spread beyond the
congregation after the funeral of a relative of the church's founder
was held at a nearby hospital, and there were several other smaller
clusters around the country.
Once the church cluster was identified, South Korea opened around 50
drive-through testing facilities around the country.
In empty parking lots, medical staff in protective clothing lean
into cars to check their passengers for fever or breathing
difficulties, and if needed, collect samples. The process usually
takes about 10 minutes, and people usually receive the results in a
text reminding them to wash their hands regularly and wear face
masks.
A total of 117 institutions in South Korea have equipment to conduct
the tests, according to the Korea Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (KCDC). The numbers fluctuate daily, but an average of
12,000 is possible, and maximum capacity is 20,000 tests a day. The
government pays for tests of people with symptoms, if referred by a
doctor. Otherwise, people who want to be tested can pay up to
170,000 won ($140), said an official at a company called Seegene
Inc, which supplies 80% of the country's kits and says it can test
96 samples at once.
There are also 130 quarantine officers like Kim Jeong-hwan, who
focus on minute details to track potential patients. The 28-year-old
public health doctor spends his whole working days remotely checking
up on people who have tested positive for COVID-19, the disease
caused by the virus.
Kim, who is doing military service, is one of a small army of
quarantine officers who track the movements of any potential
carriers of the disease by phone, app or the signals sent by cell
phones or the black boxes in automobiles. Their goal: To trace all
the contacts people may have had, so they too can be tested.
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"I haven't seen anyone telling bad lies," Kim said. "But lots of
people generally don't remember exactly what they did."
Underlining their determination, quarantine officers told Reuters
they located five cases after a worker in a small town caught the
virus and went to work in a "coin karaoke," a bar where a machine
lets people sing a few songs for a dollar. At first, the woman, who
was showing symptoms, did not tell the officers where she worked,
local officials told Reuters. But they put the puzzle together after
questioning her acquaintances and obtaining GPS locations on her
mobile device.
"Now, quarantine officers have maximum power and authority," said
Kim Jun-geun, an official at Changnyeong County who collects
information from quarantine officers.
South Korea's government also uses location data to customize mass
messages sent to cellphones, notifying every resident when and where
a nearby case is confirmed.
Lee Hee-young, a preventative medicine expert who is also running
the coronavirus response team in South Korea's Gyeonggi province,
said South Korea has gone some of the way after MERS to increase its
infrastructure to respond to infectious diseases. But she said only
30% of the changes the country needs have happened. For instance,
she said, maintaining a trained workforce and up-to-date
infrastructure at smaller hospitals isn't easy.
"Until we fix this," Lee said, "explosions like this can keep
blowing up anywhere."
(Reporting by Emilio Parodi, Stephen Jewkes, Angelo Amante, Sangmi
Cha and Ju-min Park; Additional reporting by James Mackenzie in
Milan and Josh Smith in Seoul, Julie Steenhuysen in New York; Edited
by Sara Ledwith and Jason Szep)
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