TY - JOUR
T1 - . Covid-19 pandemic in Italy: Pros and cons
AU - Magnavita, Nicola
AU - Sacco, Angelo
AU - Chirico, Francesco
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, Italy was one of the worst-affected European countries. The rapid surge of cases and the limited
capacity of intensive care unit departments have posed a serious threat to the Italian national health system. In this paper we describe the first response and the main measures carried by Italian policy makers, as coordinated by a governmental committee of public health experts, which have
succeeded in preventing the pandemic from turning into a disaster. Early closure of the school, quarantine measures and lockdown were put in place
and the response of the population has been good overall.
Despite the Italian health care system of universal coverage is considered the second-best in the world, during phase 1, the Italian decentralisation and fragmentation of health services probably restricted timely interventions and effectiveness. In northern Italy, Lombardy, Emilia Romagna,
Piedmont, and Veneto, which reported most of the Italian cases, carried out different strategies against COVID-19, with great differences in testing,
quarantine, and public health procedures.
The improvement of the epidemiological situation has allowed an easing of the restrictive measures, with a progressive restarting of work activities. The government and technical-scientific bodies have prepared health strategies to support a possible second epidemic wave in the autumn.
AB - Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, Italy was one of the worst-affected European countries. The rapid surge of cases and the limited
capacity of intensive care unit departments have posed a serious threat to the Italian national health system. In this paper we describe the first response and the main measures carried by Italian policy makers, as coordinated by a governmental committee of public health experts, which have
succeeded in preventing the pandemic from turning into a disaster. Early closure of the school, quarantine measures and lockdown were put in place
and the response of the population has been good overall.
Despite the Italian health care system of universal coverage is considered the second-best in the world, during phase 1, the Italian decentralisation and fragmentation of health services probably restricted timely interventions and effectiveness. In northern Italy, Lombardy, Emilia Romagna,
Piedmont, and Veneto, which reported most of the Italian cases, carried out different strategies against COVID-19, with great differences in testing,
quarantine, and public health procedures.
The improvement of the epidemiological situation has allowed an easing of the restrictive measures, with a progressive restarting of work activities. The government and technical-scientific bodies have prepared health strategies to support a possible second epidemic wave in the autumn.
KW - epidemics, health, organization
KW - epidemics, health, organization
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/163299
UR - https://www.ejournals.eu/zdrowie-publiczne-i-zarzadzanie/2020/tom-18-zeszyt-1/art/17398/
M3 - Article
SN - 1731-7398
SP - 32
EP - 35
JO - ZESZYTY NAUKOWE OCHRONY ZDROWIA, ZDROWIE PUBLICZNE I ZARZADZANIE
JF - ZESZYTY NAUKOWE OCHRONY ZDROWIA, ZDROWIE PUBLICZNE I ZARZADZANIE
ER -