SóProvas


ID
5028172
Banca
CEV-URCA
Órgão
URCA
Ano
2021
Provas
Disciplina
Inglês
Assuntos

Texto 3


The lessons Italy has learned about its COVID-19 outbreak could help the rest of the world


   Only carefully conducted epidemiological studies will bring to light exactly how and why COVID-19 took off in northern Italy with such speed. But in the midst of the emergency, experts say there are already lessons to be gleaned from Italy's fatal errors — and urgent messages for other parts of the world.


   "The biggest mistake we made was to admit patients infected with COVID-19 into hospitals throughout the region," said Carlo Borghetti, the vice- premier of Lombardy, an economically crucial region with a population of 10 million.


   "We should have immediately set up separate structures exclusively for people sick with coronavirus. I recommend the rest of the world do this, to not send COVID patients into health-care facilities that are still uninfected."


   Already, Italian cities in other regions are doing this, as well as field hospitals in Milan and Bergamo, Lombardy, which are almost complete.


   However, the virus was not only spread to "clean" — i.e. infection-free — hospitals by admitting positive patients. In early March, as the number of infected was doubling every few days, authorities allowed overwhelmed hospitals to transfer those who tested positive but weren't gravely ill into assistedliving facilities for the elderly.


   "It was like throwing a lit match onto a haystack," said Borghetti, who spoke out against the directive at the time. "Some facilities refused to take in the positive patients. For those that did [take them in], it was devastating."


   Along with the tragic misstep of putting infected people under the same roof as clusters of the most physically vulnerable, Borghetti and others point to a deeper structural factor that accelerated the outbreak in northern Italy: a highly centralized health-care system with large hospitals as its focus.

From: shorturl.at/cMRTW. Accesses on 04/09/2020


Sobre a decisão de colocar pacientes que testaram positivo para o corona vírus em abrigos para idosos, o texto afirma que:

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  • Podemos usar nessa questão, a estratégia de leitura selectivity, a qual  selecionamos apenas o trecho necessário do conteúdo para encontrar a informação, por meio do uso de palavras-chave, palavras cognatas e um vocabulário específico.
    A decisào de colocar pacientes que testaram positivo para o corona vírus em abrigos para idosos foi uma catástrofe, conforme parágrafos 5 e 6.
    In early March, as the number of infected was doubling every few days, authorities allowed overwhelmed hospitals to transfer those who tested positive but weren't gravely ill into assistedliving facilities for the elderly.   "It was like throwing a lit match onto a haystack," said Borghetti, who spoke out against the directive at the time. "Some facilities refused to take in the positive patients. For those that did [take them in], it was devastating."
    Tradução: No início de março, como o número de infectados dobrava em poucos dias, as autoridades permitiram que hospitais lotados transferissem aqueles com teste positivo, mas não gravemente enfermos, para instituições de assistência para idosos. "Foi como jogar um fósforo aceso em um palheiro", disse Borghetti, que se manifestou contra a diretiva na época. “Algumas instalações se recusaram a receber os pacientes positivos. Para aqueles que os aceitaram, foi devastador".

    Gabarito do Professor: Letra C.