BFF-41 Madrid turns conference centre into big field hospital

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ZCZC

BFF-41

HEALTH-VIRUS-SPAIN-HOSPITAL

Madrid turns conference centre into big field hospital

MADRID, March 22, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Dozens of coronavirus patients were
moved Sunday to a makeshift field hospital set up at a Madrid conference
centre to be fitted with 5,500 hospital beds, which would make it the biggest
such facility in Europe.

Soldiers helped move 200 patients just before midnight from area hospitals
to the sprawling IFEMA conference centre where 1,300 hospital beds have so
far been set up, the regional government of Madrid said in a statement.

The field hospital will receive a total of over 300 coronavirus patients
this weekend, the director of the facility, Antonio Zapatero, said in an
interview with daily newspaper El Mundo.

“They are arriving in waves,” he said.

The field hospital will have 5,500 beds once it is fully sent up, including
500 in an intensive care unit.

Images released by the regional government showed a medical workers wearing
a protective gown and face mask pushing a patients in a wheelchair inside the
facility.

Another photo taken before the first patients arrived showed rows of empty
beds covered in white sheets laid out on the concrete floor of the conference
centre.

The authorities have also transformed hotels in Madrid, the worst-hit
region, to treat mild cases of coronavirus to relieve pressure on hospitals.

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has warned that Spain’s outbreak, already
among the harshest in the world, would continue to expand.

“We must prepare ourselves emotionally and psychologically for very hard
days ahead,” he told the nation in a televised address late on Saturday. On
Sunday Spain reported 394 more deaths in 24 hours, raising the total to
1,720, the second-highest in Europe after Italy.

“We have yet to receive the impact of the strongest, most damaging wave,
which will test our material and moral capacities to the limit, as well as
our spirit as a society,” he added.

Spain has issued lockdown orders for its roughly 46 million residents, who
are only permitted to leave their homes for essential work, food shopping,
medical reasons or to walk the dog.

BSS/AFP/ARS/1939 hrs