French COVID groups have finished the team – for the summer holidays

France faces new disorders with coronavirus testing as dozens of nearby laboratories allow you to spend the summer holidays despite the symptoms of a wave at the moment.

Doctors warned that the Christmas crisis is just one component of a broader network of bugs in France’s testing strategy, which he described this week through the government’s virus advisory committee as disorganized and ‘inadequate’.

“First, there’s a lack of staff to do the tests. If we don’t ask all fitness personnel through everyone’s mobilization, there’s just not enough people,” said Christophe Prudhomme, an emergency doctor at a hospital. in Bobigny, Paris.

“And then it’s an organizational consultation,” he said, urging regional fitness agencies to conduct tests so that it’s not the citizen who has to pick up the phone and leave to call seven or 8 labs to get an appointment that will only take up position next week.

This is worrying news for the country, which saw its hospitals almost drowned out covid-19 patients on the first wave, in part due to insufficient testing.

The country has already lost more than 30,300 lives due to the pandemic and only 1,695 new infections were recorded.

A wave at the moment also turns out to be spreading in the rest of Europe, with countries such as Germany, Spain and Greece registering spikes in infection rates, with the number of international deaths exceeding 700,000.

France faces new disorders with coronavirus testing, as dozens of laboratories are approaching to allow the summer holidays to be spent despite the symptoms of the formation of a wave at the moment (the biologist photographed this week earlier taking a swab pattern from a man in Lille, northern France)

In France, medical offices and laboratories have joined dozens of other corporations to close and allow you to enjoy the summer holidays.

Those labs that have remained open have seen lengthy socially-distanced queues building up outside as people struggle to book a test appointment. 

This is worrying news for the country, which has noticed that famous hospitals almost drown with Covid-19 patients in the first wave, partly due to insufficient testing, and has already lost more than 30,300 lives to the pandemic.

Two months of strict closure to get the country back on track in its fight against the pandemic.

But it re-registers some 1219 new instances consistent with the day, while only two weeks ago the seven-day 719 moving average.

Yesterday, France recorded 1,695 new infections.

Two months of strict blockade seem to put the country on the right path in its fight against the pandemic; however, it is registering about 1219 new instances consistent with the day (chart showing an increasing number of coronavirus cases in France)

The country has already lost a total of more than 30,300 lives due to the pandemic (the graph shows an increasing number of coronavirus deaths in France).

The number of intensive care patients is also expanding for the first time in months.

The clinical committee recently stated that the scenario “is under control, but precarious. We can simply transfer to a less controlled scenario at any time.”

He added: “The short-term long-term pandemic is basically in people’s hands. We are most likely to revel in a momentary outbreak this fall or winter.

The press says the virus “has recently circulated more actively, with greater distance loss and barrier measures” since France left its strict two-month blockade in May.

Comments below have been moderated.

By posting your comment, you settle for our internal rules.

 

We will post your comment and link to the story on your Facebook timeline at the same time as it will be posted on MailOnline. To do this, we will link your MailOnline account to your Facebook account. We’ll ask you to check this out for your first Facebook post.

You can do this from each post if you need it to be posted to Facebook. Your facebook core points will be used to provide you with personalized content, marketing and advertising in accordance with our privacy policy.

Edited through Associated Newspapers Ltd

Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *