No
lockdown planned for Paris as severe COVID-19 cases hit three-month high
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[March 09, 2021]
By Benoit Van Overstraeten and Antony Paone
MELUN, France (Reuters) - France is not
planning to put the Paris region into lockdown even though the number of
people with COVID-19 in intensive care is at its highest since November,
public health director Jerome Salomon said on Tuesday.
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Medical authorities in the Paris region, which accounts for about
one-sixth of France's population, ordered hospitals on Monday to
cancel 40% of their regular activities to make space for critical
COVID-19 patients.
But Salomon told RTL radio: "A lockdown in the greater Paris region
is not on the agenda."
"Lockdown is a last resort measure that would be submitted to the
government and the president if we were under the impression the
hospital system could not cope," he said.
The number of people treated in intensive care units for COVID-19 in
France reached a 14-1/2-week-high on Monday at 3,849. The figure was
almost 1,000 for the Paris region.
At Melun Hospital Centre, about 50 km (31 miles) southeast of Paris,
staff said they were at full stretch trying to monitor all the
COVID-19 patients in the intensive care unit.
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"With intensive care beds, in
our region, and in certain other regions, we're
starting to be close to capacity," said Dr.
Moncef Monchi, head of the intensive care unit.
In one of the intensive care bays at the
hospital on Monday, Dr Esther Mbakallu was
intubating a patient under sedation -- inserting
a breathing tube that will pump extra oxygen
into his airway. She said his condition had
worsened so he needed mechanical help to
breathe.
"He was scared," she said of the patient before
he was sedated to have the tube inserted. "There
are rumours going around that patients who are
intubated die, so he had that apprehension. I
reassured him."
(Reporting by Benoit Van Overstraeten in Paris
and Antony Paone in Melun, France; Editing by
Timothy Heritage)
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