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HEALTH

Covid-19: Rome makes face masks compulsory in public at all times

Authorities in Rome and the surrounding Lazio region have ordered that masks must be worn at all times when in public following a sharp rise in new coronavirus cases locally.

Covid-19: Rome makes face masks compulsory in public at all times
A pedestrian wearing a face mask by Piazza Venezia in downtown Rome. Photo: AFP

While national rules already mean masks must be worn outdoors in public places in the evening, Lazio is the latest region to extend this rule to 24 hours a day.

“Masks are also mandatory during the day in Lazio,” said regional health councilor Alessio D'Amato at a press conference on Friday morning, held at the Lazzaro Spallanzani hospital in Rome and broadcast on social media.

The ordinance, signed by Lazio regional governor Nicola Zingaretti, will come into force tomorrow, Saturday October 3rd.
 
D'Amato confirmed that the provision applies to everyone except for children under the age of six and those with disabilities which prevent them from wearing a mask. Masks do not need to be worn by people exercising outdoors if they are alone.
 

 
Anyone who doesn't comply with the rules can be fined up to 400 euros.
 

“Masks are a powerful prevention tool which can stop the curve and send a message that we must follow rules,” he added.  “We need to rebuild together a path of responsibility as we have done in recent months together.”
 

The measure had to be introduced as the transmission rate (or R rate) in the region has now exceeded 1, D'Amato said.
 
On Thursday Lazio recorded its highest number of new cases in one day since the beginning of the emergency, with 265 new infections detected in the region.
 
 
Of those, 151 were in central Rome, and the city also recorded five deaths.
 
There are 49 people currently in intensive care in the region according to data from the regional health authority.
 
D'Aamato added during the press conference that, in total, the regional health authority had found some 290 positive cases in schools since they reopened.
 
He said this figure was in line with expectations.

 
Lazio is the latest Italian region to make masks compulsory at all times in public, after Lombardy, Campania, Sicily, and Calabria. Several cities in Italy have also tightened restrictions after a sharp rise in cases.
 
 
Italy registered 2,548 new covid-19 infections on Thursday – the first time the number has exceeded 2,000 since April 29th.
 
The Veneto region recorded the most new infections with 445, followed by Campania with 390.
 

 
The number of new cases, as well as deaths and hospitalisations, has been rising in Italy for several weeks now. However Italian authorties insist that the situation can be kept under control at current rates.
 
Amid a new surge in cases across Europe, Italy overall is still seeing far lower levels of transmission than other European countries such as the UK, France and Spain.
 
 
Italian authorities are hoping that introducing timely local restrictions could be the key to avoiding another regional or even national lockdown.

In the rest of Italy, face masks are compulsory indoors during the day and outdoors between 6pm to 6am if you're in a busy area.

The government is set to review exisiting national rules under the emergency decree on September 7th.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said on Thursday the government plans to extend the current state of emergency in the country until January 2021.

 

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HEALTH

Italy records first ‘indigenous’ case of dengue fever in 2024

Italian health authorities said on Thursday they recorded the first 'indigenous' case of dengue fever for 2024 after a patient who had not travelled abroad tested positive.

Italy records first 'indigenous' case of dengue fever in 2024

“The person who tested positive for dengue fever is in good clinical condition,” the provincial health authority of Brescia, northern Italy, said in a statement on Thursday.

The areas where the patient lived and worked have begun mosquito control measures, including setting mosquito traps, the agency said.

The head of the epidemiology department at Genoa’s San Martino Hospital, Matteo Bassetti, questioned whether it was indeed the first indigenous case of the year, or rather the first recognised one.

“By now, Dengue is an infection that must be clinically considered whenever there are suspicious symptoms, even outside of endemic areas,” Bassetti wrote on social media platform X.

Dengue is a viral disease causing a high fever. In rare cases, it can progress to more serious conditions resulting in severe bleeding.

Deaths are very rare.

An indigenous case means that the person has not recently travelled to regions of the world where the virus, which is transmitted from one person to another by tiger mosquitoes (Aedes albopictus), is widely circulating.

The presence of those mosquitoes have been increasing in several southern European countries, including Italy, France and Spain.

The World Health Organization has said the rise has been partly fuelled by climate change and weather phenomena in which heavy rain, humidity and higher temperatures favour mosquitoes’ reproduction and transmission of the virus.

In 2023, Italy recorded more than 80 indigenous cases, while France had about fifty, according to the WHO.

Cases in which the person is infected abroad number in the hundreds.

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