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Reuters
Reuters
Health
Bruno Kelly and Gabriel Araujo

As coronavirus stalks Brazil's Amazon, many die untreated at home

Edvaldo Braga walks with municipal healthcare workers after they examined the body of his mother Lacy Braga de Oliveira, who died at home at the age of 84, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Manaus, Brazil, January 11, 2021. Picture taken January 11, 2021. REUTERS/Bruno Kelly

Shirlene Morais Costa died at her home in the northern Brazilian city of Manaus on Monday, likely the latest victim of a devastating new wave of COVID-19 that has returned to this isolated city deep in the Amazon rainforest.

The 53-year-old went to hospital with a cough and a fever, both symptoms of the coronavirus, but was sent home, according to her stepfather, Esteliano Lopes Filho, 74.

A kid looks on as a municipal healthcare worker walks after examining the body of Shirlene Morais Costa, who died at home at the age of 53 after reporting symptoms consistent with COVID-19, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Manaus, Brazil, January 11, 2021. REUTERS/Bruno Kelly

"Her death was swift... We called the ambulance, but it only arrived after she was dead," he said. "We're seeing death after death... It really is a terrible calamity."

Brazil is home to the world's second deadliest coronavirus outbreak after the United States, and Manaus was one of the first Brazilian cities to creak under a spiraling death and caseload from the first wave of the pandemic last year.

So many were infected that some scientists thought the city of 2 million people might have been approaching herd immunity. But that projection has proved well wide of the mark.

A municipal healthcare worker walks past oxygen cylinders as she arrives to examine the body of Anselmo Chagas Cardoso, who died at home at the age of 71 after reporting symptoms consistent with COVID-19, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Manaus, Brazil, January 12, 2021. REUTERS/Bruno Kelly

The state of Amazonas, where nearly 6,000 people have died from COVID-19, is now suffering a devastating second wave that is pushing emergency services to breaking point. Many people, like Morais Costa, are dying at home.

Beds for COVID-19 patients in the state reached an occupancy rate of over 98% this week, according to data from the Amazonas state health department. Occupancy in temporary facilities that provide assistance to critical patients for later referral to other points of the health network was at 131%.

There are currently 1,391 patients hospitalized with COVID-19 in the state, in addition to a further 603 people hospitalized with suspected cases, the data shows.

A municipal healthcare worker prepares to cover the body of Rocimar Fernandes dos Santos, who died at home at the age of 43 after reporting symptoms consistent with COVID-19, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Manaus, Brazil, January 12, 2021. REUTERS/Bruno Kelly

Last week, refrigerated containers were placed outside the main hospitals in Manaus for the first time since the pandemic's April peak. The containers are used to store bodies as the city's healthcare and burial services again become overwhelmed.

(Editing by Gabriel Stargardter and Rosalba O'Brien)

A municipal healthcare worker walks past an oxygen cylinder as he arrives to examine the body of Anselmo Chagas Cardoso, who died at home at the age of 71 after reporting symptoms consistent with COVID-19, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Manaus, Brazil, January 12, 2021. REUTERS/Bruno Kelly
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