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Press release

Statement from the National Public Health Emergency Team - Thursday 28 January


Today's cases

The Health Protection Surveillance Centre has today been notified of 47 additional deaths related to COVID-19. 46 deaths occurred in January.

The median age of those who died is 85 years and the age range is 55-99 years.

There has been a total of 3,167 COVID-19 related deaths in Ireland.

As of midnight Wednesday 27 January, the HPSC has been notified of 1,466 confirmed cases of COVID-19. There has now been a total of 192,645* confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Ireland.

(*Validation of data at the HPSC has resulted in the denotification of 3 confirmed cases. The figure of 192,645 confirmed cases reflects this.)

Of the cases notified today:

  • 697 are men and 764 are women
  • 55% are under 45 years of age
  • the median age is 41 years old
  • 472 in Dublin, 106 in Galway, 103 in Cork, 77 in Waterford, 70 in Limerick and the remaining 638 cases are spread across all other counties

As of 2pm today, 1,567 COVID-19 patients are hospitalised, of which 216 are in ICU. There have been 69 additional hospitalisations in the past 24 hours.

Dr Tony Holohan, Chief Medical Officer, Department of Health, said:

"Incidence is falling but remains high. It is positive to see numbers of people hospitalised reducing and a stabilisation of numbers in ICU.

"However, we are continuing to experience high mortality with 878 deaths so far in January. I am concerned about the high incidence we are seeing in long-term care settings and vulnerable groups. Our efforts to stay home and break transmission of the disease will save lives. Please continue to follow the public health advice and support each other to keep going."

Professor Philip Nolan, Chair of the NPHET Irish Epidemiological Modelling Advisory Group, said:

"Incidence is falling and by working collectively to reduce contacts, we have achieved suppression of transmission with the R number estimated at 0.4-0.7. We are maintaining an extraordinary effort but still we have a long way to go. We must maintain full suppression for several weeks if we are to achieve strategic options for the future. If we keep this up, we would be down to 200-400 cases per day by the end of February."

Dr Lorraine Doherty, National Clinical Director Health Protection HSE - Health Protection Surveillance Centre (HPSC), said:

"It only takes one event to spark a chain of transmission of COVID-19 that can spread through a community. We have seen examples of outbreaks in a workplace that has led to multiple outbreaks in families and other work settings, and these ultimately lead to a higher incidence in the community and threatens the most vulnerable to COVID-19. Every action an individual takes matters."

The COVID-19 Dashboard provides up-to-date information on the key indicators of COVID-19 in the community.


County-by-county cases and incidence rates

  • the 7-day incidence is 225.8
  • the 5-day moving average is 1,294

County data should be considered provisional as the national Computerised Infectious Disease Reporting System (CIDR) is a dynamic system and case details are continually being validated and updated.

County Today’s cases (to midnight 27/1/21) 5-day moving average of new cases (to 27/1/21) 14-day incidence rate per 100,000 population (to 27/1/21) New cases during last 14 days (to 27/1/21)
Ireland 1,466 1,294 621.9 29,614
Monaghan 50 49 1,373.3 843
Louth 59 63 908.6 1,171
Carlow 33 25 874.7 498
Waterford 77 51 866.8 1,007
Dublin 472 409 733.4 9,882
Mayo 68 43 730.2 953
Wexford 52 54 709.3 1,062
Limerick 70 51 668.6 1,303
Offaly 17 25 623.4 486
Meath 36 50 607.0 1,184
Cavan 11 16 599.9 457
Donegal 63 40 599.9 955
Cork 103 128 569.2 3,090
Kildare 57 45 567.2 1,262
Galway 106 68 538.6 1,390
Laois 15 16 504.2 427
Tipperary 31 33 497.0 793
Clare 24 22 415.8 494
Wicklow 28 26 389.7 555
Sligo 15 12 384.5 252
Longford 13 10 362.1 148
Westmeath 18 18 350.3 311
Kilkenny 16 15 348.7 346
Kerry 18 17 322.3 476
Roscommon 11 5 294.4 190
Leitrim <5 <5 246.5 79

View slides from today's press conference