Id |
Subject |
Object |
Predicate |
Lexical cue |
T47 |
0-285 |
Sentence |
denotes |
Early March 2020, doctors in the affected regions of Italy described a situation in which ca 10% of patients with COVID-19 required intensive care [7] and media sources reported that hospitals and intensive care units in these regions had already reached their maximum capacity [8=13]. |
T48 |
286-462 |
Sentence |
denotes |
Data on admission of COVID-19 cases in a hospital and/or an intensive care unit are currently available at EU/EEA level for only 6% and 1% cases, respectively (data not shown). |
T49 |
463-630 |
Sentence |
denotes |
They should, however, be collected in a systematic fashion to complement current surveillance data that focus on the number of reported cases and the number of deaths. |
T50 |
631-842 |
Sentence |
denotes |
A study performed in 2010–11 showed a large variation in the availability of intensive care and intermediate care beds in Europe, ranging from 29.2 in Germany to 4.2 beds per 100,000 population in Portugal [14]. |
T51 |
843-995 |
Sentence |
denotes |
This means that countries may have more or less resources than Italy (12.5 intensive care and intermediate care beds per 100,000 population in 2010–11). |
T52 |
996-1312 |
Sentence |
denotes |
Modelling scenarios related to healthcare capacity saturation, with estimates for each EU/EEA country and the UK of the prevalence of hospitalised COVID-19 cases associated with a > 90% risk of exceeding intensive care bed capacity, are provided in the sixth update of the ECDC rapid risk assessment on COVID-19 [1]. |
T53 |
1313-1649 |
Sentence |
denotes |
Since cases have so far clustered in certain regions in EU/EEA countries and the UK, and hospitals and intensive care units usually serve a defined regional catchment population, information about cases and intensive care beds should preferably be made available at the Nomenclature of territorial units for statistics 2 (NUTS-2) level. |