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Press release

Statement from the National Public Health Emergency Team - Thursday 5 November

The Health Protection Surveillance Centre has today been notified of 3 additional deaths related to COVID-19.

There has been a total of 1,933 COVID-19 related deaths in Ireland.

As of midnight Wednesday 4 November, the HPSC has been notified of 591 confirmed cases of COVID-19. There has now been a total of 64,046* confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Ireland.

(*Validation of data at the HPSC has resulted in the denotification of 28 confirmed cases. The figure of 64,046 confirmed cases reflects this.)

Of the cases notified today:

  • 280 are men and 310 are women
  • 59% are under 45 years of age
  • the median age is 38 years old
  • 120 in Dublin, 75 in Donegal, 50 in Cork, 46 in Kerry, 44 in Limerick and the remaining 256 cases are spread across 20 other counties

As of 2pm today, 302 COVID-19 patients are hospitalised, of which 38 are in ICU. There have been 20 additional hospitalisations in the past 24 hours.

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

"A second surge is taking place across Europe. Ireland and Finland are the only European countries in the EU where reductions in 14 – day incidence have been observed. All other countries are increasing.

"Level 5 efforts over the last two weeks have succeeded in further reducing community transmission and disease incidence in Ireland. However, now is not the time to be complacent. We must keep driving down this disease - we must keep going.

"The 19 to 24 year old age group has achieved a dramatic reduction in incidence, from 450 per 100,000 to 150 per 100,000 in two weeks. They have also halved their contacts in the past 5 weeks. We all need to recognise the efforts of our young people and I thank them."

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

"We estimate the reproduction number at 0.7 - 0.9. This is a testament to our collective effort to stop the spread of the virus and it is very good news. We may be doing better now but it is conditional on whether we keep it up. If we continue to use this time to drive the infection right down, we will be in a good position in four weeks' time."

Dr. Vida Hamilton, National Clinical Advisor and Group Lead, Acute Hospitals, HSE:

"While the age demographic of cases vary from the first surge back in March to this one, ICU admissions have affected people from all age groups, with the average length of stay at 17.8 days. People of all ages are potentially vulnerable to the more extreme symptoms of this disease."

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

ENDS

Today’s cases, 14-day incidence rate per 100,000 population and new cases in last 14 days (as of midnight 4 November 2020) (incidence rate based on Census 2016 county population)

County Today’s Cases (to midnight 4/11/20) 14-Day incidence rate per 100,000 population (14 days to midnight 4/11/20) New Cases during last 14 days (14 days to midnight 4/11/20)
Ireland 591 202.1 9,625
Donegal 75 300.3 478
Cavan <5 294.1 224
Meath 35 291.7 569
Sligo 12 256.4 168
Westmeath 12 253.5 225
Cork 50 235.0 1,276
Limerick 44 229.9 448
Carlow 7 217.8 124
Galway 22 211.6 546
Dublin 120 201.5 2,715
Roscommon <5 198.3 128
Longford 7 198.2 81
Kerry 46 194.3 287
Louth 13 193.2 249
Waterford 17 188.5 219
Clare 14 182.6 217
Mayo 17 181.6 237
Monaghan <5 177.6 109
Kildare 20 176.6 393
Laois 7 167.7 142
Kilkenny 12 134.0 133
Tipperary 13 132.2 211
Wexford 21 125.6 188
Offaly <5 112.9 88
Wicklow 14 106.7 152
Leitrim <5 56.2 18

Note:

The lowest national 14-day incidence rate was on 3 July 2020 when the rate was 2.98 cases per 100,000 population.


Hospital statistics

Total number of cases 63,455
Total number hospitalised 4,528
Total number admitted to ICU 567
Total number of deaths 1,674
Total number of healthcare workers 10,689
Number clusters notified 6,945
Cases associated with clusters 30,553
Median age 39
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Tuesday 3 November.

Gender of patients

Gender Number of cases
Male 29,748
Female 33,672
Unknown 35
Total 63,455
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Tuesday 3 November.

Age range affected

Age range Number of cases
0 - 4 1,502
5 - 14 3,628
15 - 24 11,016
25 - 34 10,745
35 - 44 9,960
45 - 54 9,687
55 - 64 6,979
65 - 74 3,691
75 - 84 3,279
85+ 2,936
Unknown 32
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Tuesday 3 November.

How COVID-19 is spreading

Transmission classification %
Community transmission 32
Close contact with confirmed case 61.3
Travel abroad 1.5
Unknown 5.3
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Tuesday 3 November.

Note:

When a person tests positive for COVID-19 but hasn't been abroad or had contact with another confirmed case in Ireland, that's known as community transmission.

In the event that a person who tests positive for COVID-19 can be linked to another confirmed case in Ireland, that's known as close contact.


Hospitalised cases by age group

Age range Number of cases
0 - 4 47
5 - 14 45
15 - 24 140
25 - 34 282
35 - 44 363
45 - 54 587
55 - 64 676
65 - 74 809
75 - 84 979
85+ 598
Unknown 2
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Tuesday 3 November.

Cases by county

County Number of cases Change since the day before
Carlow 556 No change
Cavan 2,078 +3
Clare 1,320 +7
Cork 5,642 +47
Donegal 2,211 +16
Dublin 24,343 +145
Galway 2,369 +35
Kerry 1,118 +20
Kildare 3,790 +12
Kilkenny 794 +11
Laois 850 +4
Leitrim 230 No change
Limerick 2,107 +26
Longford 581 +1
Louth 1,724 +7
Mayo 1,210 +12
Meath 3,029 +20
Monaghan 1,129 +3
Offaly 1,041 -2
Roscommon 808 +13
Sligo 656 +6
Tipperary 1,245 +11
Waterford 773 +5
Westmeath 1,434 +8
Wexford 1,101 No change
Wicklow 1,316 +6
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Tuesday 3 November.