Madrid restrictions a too little too late – experts
Madrid is currently struggling with an infection rate of 730 cases per 100,000 people, compared with just 300 per 100,000 in the rest of Spain.
Several ‘mozos’ or runners wearing the traditional outfit chant in front of a St. Fermin sculpture in Pamplona, northern Spain, 07 July 2020. The mozos sang as each Sanfermines before the ‘running of the bulls’ despite no bull-runs as the festival was canceled due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. Picture: EPA-EFE/JESUS DIGES
As the city of Madrid braced Friday for the imposition of new restrictions to curb the soaring rate of infections, Spanish experts warned the measures were too little, too late and would be very difficult to implement.
The partial lockdown, which will also apply to nine other nearby towns, will come into force at 10:00 pm (2000 GMT) with people only allowed to leave the city limits for work, school or medical and legal reasons.
Madrid’s regional authorities have criticised the restrictions on citizens’ movements as too stringent, but for healthcare experts, they simply don’t go far enough.
“For all epidemiologists, these restrictions are coming very late, they should have been put in place much earlier, by the start of September,” said Salvador Peiro of FISABIO, a healthcare research organisation in the Valencia area.
Closing off the perimeter was a measure which was “very easy to implement in certain towns but very hard in large cities” such as Madrid, he said, pointing out that hundreds of thousands of people travel every day, often on public transport, to work in nearby towns.
Fernando Garcia, an epidemiologist at the Madrid public health association, expressed surprise they “did not include a recommendation to work from home” as during the three-month lockdown that started in March.
And he thought the restrictions on seating capacity in bars and restaurants — reduced to 50 percent indoors and 60 percent at terraces — should have been greater.
Others said merely reducing mobility was not enough given the scarcity of track-and-trace resources, with the Madrid authorities urgently requesting military help.
Madrid is currently struggling with an infection rate of 730 cases per 100,000 people, compared with just 300 per 100,000 in the rest of Spain – which in itself is the highest in the European Union.
According to the government decree published on Thursday, restrictions must be imposed on all areas that have counted more than 500 cases per 100,000 inhabitants over the previous 14 days — but experts said the rate should be lower.
A threshold of 500 cases per 100,000 people was far “too high”, said Ildefonso Hernández of the Spanish Public Health Society (Sespas).
In Germany, he said, limitations on social gatherings kicked in with a rate of 35 cases per 100,000.
And in the UK the trigger rate for restrictions was 100 cases per 100,000.
Even within the rest of Spain, limitations have been put in place much earlier in regions like Asturias, Galicia and Valencia, where they kicked in with an incidence of fewer than 100 cases per 100,000 people.
The virus has now killed nearly 32,000 people in Spain and has infected around 760,000.
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