To be fair France and Germany gave it back too... but it underlines the degree of "every man for himself which reigns right now. And nobody trusts that they'll consitently give it back either...
I wonder what will the world look like when we get out.
Despite successive funding cuts the Spanish healthcare system is fairly well equipped, and ICU wise I think it was the third or fourth with the highest ration per capita. It could be that by shuffling people around (which they might have to do anyway if they took the private sector's offer) they can rely purely on public resources.
Qualified people are as scarce as ICUs and respirators.
Over here, our hospitals have scaled up their corona ICU capacity from 1150 to 2400 beds (theres a few hundred more but those are reserved for non-corona acute care), which might just barely be be enough for the peak, but probably not, because patients that survive keep the ICU beds occupied for 3 weeks.
However, even if we have more beds and respirators and all the other equipment needed, we are hitting a qualified personnell wall.
Where normally, there is at least 1 on 1 care per ICU bed, it's already stretched thin to 1 on 3. Adding more ICU beds will not be possible for lack of nurses and doctors.
And with the schools and universities closed, it looks like there's not going to be many new doctors, nurses or interns this summer because lots of students will need to redo their year.
Ah, but the private sector has it's own share o anesthesiologist and ICU specialists (in Spain they are separate specialities.) ... but those cost money too.
I'm aware of the shortage (I said as much before... that's my suspicion as to why Tesla's respiators are actually BiPAPs fo NIMV), but yeah, that makes the private sector's offer so much more important because that means both respirators and specialists, not just more respirators.
I think that despite the public gloom they are not as globally short on ICU beds as the pretended, particularily if they shuffle people around from Madrid to elsewhere.
Btw schools and unis wouldnt sort out the doctor shortage because the largest lack is in particular specialities. Goverments want mostly two things now. Well three things: on one hand they want people able to intubate and operate ventilators. On the other, they want an army of as-cheap-as-you-can-get them inexperienced junior docs or even last year medical students to do odd jobs and deal with the deluge of mild cases in the ER, and a number of more experienced doctors(preferibly internal medicine, GPs, or respiratory) to oversee them and make rough plans for the non ICU patients.
The rest? They're not that necessary (for now) unless the ones they have get sick, because most of the regular activity has been cancelled.
(Yes I'm rather cynical about western goverment's crisis management how did you tell?)