Madrid prepares for coronavirus second wave as cases rise
Madrid is preparing for a second wave of coronavirus as the virus continues to take hold in the Spanish capital.
Madrid is preparing for a second wave of coronavirus as the virus continues to take hold in the Spanish capital.
Green tents, similar to those erected when the pandemic first hit, have been installed at the gates of a Madrid military hospital. These will be used to triage incoming COVID-19 patients and to take the pressure off emergency wards.
Spain’s Defense Ministry, which manages the Gómez Ulla military hospital, said Friday that the tents are empty for now, installed as a precaution in case the second COVID-19 wave taking hold in the Spanish capital continues to spread.
With a rate of virus transmission six times higher than the national average in the 6.6 million Madrid region, authorities are set to announce Friday “drastic measures” to try to slow down the outbreaks. They could include localized lockdowns or other restrictions on movement centered in the city’s hardest-hit areas, which are also the poorest and more densely populated.
Spain on Thursday added more than 11,000 new infections and registered 162 new confirmed deaths for the new virus. The country has Europe's highest caseload since the beginning of the pandemic. More than 625,000 people have been infected and at least 30,400 have died, according to the Health Ministry’s official data.
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