Coronavirus: Inside a Field Hospital in Brazil

The Dell’Antonia Field Hospital for Covid-19 patients is on the outskirts of Sao Paulo, Brazil.

It is located within a gym and was built to take the stress off traditional hospitals. On Tuesday it used 57 percent of its 180 beds, including 20 ICUs.

The country has the 2nd-highest number of cases globally.

“Our governments just keep fighting to see who is better between themselves and they are not seeing people’s suffering,” says Covid-19 patient Elinaldo dos Santos.

A justice in Brazil’s top court ordered the nation’s health ministry to resume the publication of detailed reports on the local coronavirus outbreak amid accusations that President Jair Bolsonaro’s administration was trying to hide numbers.

Judge Alexandre de Moraes gave the government 48 hours to return to the format it had used up until June 4, which included both daily increases in virus cases and deaths as well as cumulative figures since the start of the outbreak. The ministry strayed away from that model on Friday, fueling accusations from medical experts, including former Health Minister Luiz Henrique Mandetta, that it was trying to cover up numbers.

By the afternoon, the interim Health Minister Eduardo Pazuello confirmed that the ministry would resume publishing the data as they had before the change. On Tuesday evening Brazil’s states reported 32,091 new cases for a total of 739,503 and 1,272 new deaths for a total of 38,406. Shortly thereafter the health ministry reported the same numbers, and they appeared in their entirety on the ministry’s website.

In the decision published early on Tuesday, Moraes wrote that the gathering and publication of data were crucial to guiding public policies.

Brazil’s constitution “expressly enshrined the principle of disclosure as one of the indispensable vectors for the public sector, giving it absolute priority within administrative management and guaranteeing full access to information for the entire society,” Moraes wrote in the ruling that was published on the court’s website.

The decision is the latest twist in a controversy over how the government releases data on one of the world’s biggest Covid-19 hotspots. Scrutiny of the data grew last week when the health ministry removed its virus database from its website and said it would change how it tallies deaths attributed to the pandemic. Brazil has already recorded the second-highest number of cases in the world, and the peak of the outbreak is still weeks away.

The presidency’s press office said Sunday that the ministry tried to provide a more accurate picture of the disease’s “moment” with its methodology change. Still, the ministry resumed the publication of historical data amid the backlash.

Interim Health Minister Eduardo Pazuello said on Tuesday that the government is launching a new tool and not manipulating virus data. Information on the pandemic must be complete and easy to access, he said during a cabinet meeting broadcast live on television.

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In This Story: Brazil

Brazil is the largest country in both South America and Latin America.

Its capital is Brasília, and its most populous city is São Paulo. The federation is composed of the union of the 26 states and the Federal District. It is the largest country to have Portuguese as an official language and the only one in the Americas, as well as the most populous Roman Catholic-majority country.

Its Amazon basin includes a vast tropical forest, home to diverse wildlife, a variety of ecological systems, and extensive natural resources spanning numerous protected habitats. Brazil is classified as an upper-middle income economy by the World Bank and a newly industrialized country.

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Covid-19 is the official WHO name given to the novel coronavirus which broke out in late 2019 and began to spread in the early months of 2020.

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The main symptoms of coronavirus are:

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  • a high temperature (e.g. head feels warm to the touch)
  • shortness of breath (if this is abnormal for the individual, or increased)

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