The new coronavirus assaults the lungs and, in serious cases, leaves a patient unfit to breath without mechanical help — a ventilator. In Italy, assaulted by COVID-19 and confronting its most exceedingly terrible wellbeing emergency since World War II, specialists have been compelled to play God. Marta Manfredi's sickly, 83-year-old granddad was denied care under a crisis decree where just patients with the most obvious opportunity with regards to endurance gain a ventilator. "They said there was no point," she told Reuters. He kicked the bucket in a morphine-initiated rest. This must not be America's future. Be that as it may, the math is coldblooded with regards to the country's stockpile of medical clinic rooms, escalated care units, ventilators, respirators and different instruments important to battle the pandemic. The country has around 46,500 ICU beds, perhaps twofold that in an emergency. On the off chance that coronavirus demonstrates as significant as the 1918 influenza, 2.9 million Americans will require concentrated consideration, as per a Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security report. An expected 742,500 will require ventilators, in view of a Department of Health and Human Services truth sheet. At the present time, emergency clinics have the ability to ventilate 160,000 patients.