Spain’s coronavirus death toll overtook that of China on Wednesday, rising to 3,434 after 738 people died over the past 24 hours, the government said.
Across the world, only Italy now has a higher death toll than that of Spain. In China, where the virus emerged late last year, 3,281 people have died.
The spiralling number of deaths came as Spain entered the 11th day of an unprecedented lockdown to try and rein in the COVID-19 epidemic that has now infected 47,610 people, the health ministry said.
As the authorities stepped up testing, the number of cases showed a 20 percent increase on the figures for Tuesday, while the death toll showed a 27 percent raise over the same period.
Police showing respect to all the Doctors and Nurses fighting this war in Spain and around the world! 😔What you hear is the Anthem of Asturias, where I was born, played with a bagpipe in from of Hospital de Jove in Gijón! #Coronavirus hard times ahead but this gives hope… pic.twitter.com/ilLi6X409Z
— José Andrés (@chefjoseandres) March 23, 2020
Despite the national lockdown imposed on March 14, which is to be extended until April 11, both deaths and infections have continued to mount, with officials warning this week would be particularly bad.
Hospitals in Spain are so overcrowded
Hospitals in Spain are so overcrowded that people are lying on the streets outside the hospitals waiting for the inevitable or to be one of the lucky ones to get some treatment.
“We are approaching the peak,” the ministry’s emergencies coordinator Fernando Simon said in announcing the figures.
Health authorities are hoping it will soon become clear whether the lockdown is having the desired effect.
Hospitals in #Spain are so overcrowded that #Coronavirus victims are simply lying on the floor.
Where is @WHO in all of this death and destruction?pic.twitter.com/8H35XKYd8d
— Steve Hanke (@steve_hanke) March 23, 2020
The Madrid region has suffered the brunt of the epidemic with 14,597 infections — just under a third of the total — and 1,825 deaths, or 53 percent of the national figure.
With hospitals on the brink of collapse from the surge in patients, troops have set up a massive field hospital in Madrid’s vast IFEMA exhibition centre which currently has 1,500 beds but which could be expanded to take in up to 5,500 people — making it the largest hospital in Spain.
And with the city’s funeral services overwhelmed, officials have commandeered the Palacio de Hielo ice skating rink to serve as a temporary morgue.
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