Home » News » Coronavirus: the New York hospital that faced yellow fever, cholera, AIDS, Ebola and now covid-19

Coronavirus: the New York hospital that faced yellow fever, cholera, AIDS, Ebola and now covid-19

April 14, 2020

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The Bellevue became famous for hosting the best surgeons in the country. Until the 1840s, they operated without anesthesia.

In the summer of 1795, patients began arriving at Bellevue Hospital in New York City with symptoms of yellow fever.

The American metropolis was experiencing the beginning of an epidemic that, only in that year, would leave 730 dead, a devastating result for a city that, at that time, had a population of 40,000.

More than two centuries later, the Bellevue, one of the public hospitals oldest and most prestigious in the country, is once again at the forefront in the fight against the new epidemic that is hitting the city.

In recent weeks, wards and medical professionals have been reorganized to accommodate the growing number of patients with covid-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus.

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