Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Medical masks on sale at a store in Amsterdam Oost
Medical masks on sale at a store in Amsterdam Oost. April 24, 2020 - Credit: NL Times
Business
Food
Health
Covid-19
Coronavirus
intensive care
catering
restaurants
cafes
LCPS
Nice
Tuesday, 9 June 2020 - 17:05

Share this article:

Covid-19 patients in ICU down 93% since peak; Some cafes close up over low revenue

The total number of patients with Covid-19 being treated in intensive care on Tuesday decreased by one to 91. It was the fifth day straight where the number of patients held below 100, according to data from patient coordination office LCPS.

There has been a steady decline in ICU patients since the peak on April 9. On that date there were 1,417 Covid-19 patients, which has gone down over 93 percent in two months. Some 2,906 people in the Netherlands have required intensive care treatment for the coronavirus disease since early March, of which 839 have died and 1,529 recovered and were discharged, according to data from nonprofit organization NICE.

While intensive care cases have gone down and stabilized, the Netherlands has pressed forward with its phased plan to reopen the country. Just one week after the hospitality industry has been allowed to open up restaurants, cafes and bars to a limited number of people, some have decided to close back up because their turnover has been too low.

Issues include skittish customers who are not ready to patronize cafes, several days of chillier, windy weather, and the higher costs needed to keep locations open. "We have also received signals from catering entrepreneurs that they have closed their business again, because with all the restrictions it has been far from returning to profitability," a spokesperson for catering association KHN told news outlet Nu.nl.

The rules as of June 1 state that restaurants are allowed a maximum of 30 people inside at any time, not including workers, but everyone still has to keep 1.5 meters away from each other. Similar restrictions are placed on outdoor areas, with the rules likely to loosen up further on July 1

More like this

Image
Vaccination
Covid booster for risk groups starting from Oct. 2; hospitalizations on the rise
Image
The Haga Hospital in The Hague
Covid hospitalizations back on the rise after new virus variant emerges
Image
Trauma helicopter Lifeliner 6 departs from the Groene Hart Hospital in Gouda, Zuid-Holland, with a Covid-19 patient. May 2020
No Covid-19 patients in ICU for the first time since pandemic began
Image
Ernst Kuipers in April 2022
Health Minister Ernst Kuipers steps down with immediate effect
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Court-ordered psychiatric care for criminals is under strain as waitlist rises to 261
  • Zundert community in shock after hot air balloon passenger leaps to his death
  • Dutch mortgage applications slip in May as home prices hit record high
  • Dutch gov't urged to critically examine whether AI can really solve healthcare problems
  • Prosecutors seek 30 years for man who shot neighbor in front of her 4-year-old son

Top stories

  • Marketing firm behind iconic “I Amsterdam” campaign files for bankruptcy
  • Council of State: Public safety still at risk if fireworks ban rules are not tightened
  • Three hurt in two overnight stabbings in The Hague
  • Dutch gov't will try cutting EU development aid to Sierra Leone over Bolle Jos
  • Police threatened over video of cop throwing pregnant woman to floor in asylum shelter

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content