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Press release

Statement from the National Public Health Emergency Team - Monday 4 January


The Health Protection Surveillance Centre has today been notified of 6 additional deaths related to COVID-19.

There has been a total of 2,265 COVID-19 related deaths in Ireland.

As of midnight Sunday 3 January, the HPSC has been notified of 6,110 confirmed cases of COVID-19. There has now been a total of 107,997 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Ireland.

Of the cases notified today:

  • 2,911 are men and 3,195 are women
  • 63% are under 45 years of age
  • the median age is 36 years old
  • 3,655 in Dublin, 323 in Kildare, 291 in Cork, 234 in Limerick, 137 in Louth and the remaining 1,470 cases are spread across all other counties

As of 2pm today, 776 COVID-19 patients are hospitalised, of which 70 are in ICU. There have been 92 additional hospitalisations in the past 24 hours.

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

"Leaders and organisations in communities across the country now need to support their colleagues, neighbours, family and friends to keep to the spirit of public health advice. We must restrict our movements, we have to limit the people we interact with outside of our households, if we are to suppress the virus and sustain our essential services."

Dr. Ronan Glynn, Deputy Chief Medical Officer, Department of Health, said:

"People particularly vulnerable to COVID-19 include older persons and people with pre-existing medical conditions including cardiovascular disease, obesity, diabetes, chronic respiratory disease and cancer. The incidence of disease in the community is now at a level where vulnerable people need to stay at home unless absolutely essential."

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

"Scenario models raise the possibility of 1,500-2,000 people in hospital, and 200-400 people in ICU by mid-January, if we do not act to radically reduce transmission and incidence. It will take all of us, adopting the public health measures of staying home and reducing contacts, to suppress current levels of disease."

Mr. Liam Woods, HSE National Director, Acute Operations, said:

"We are introducing curtailments in non-essential services in adult hospitals in order to cope with increasing COVID-19 admissions. This will be subject to ongoing review. In the event of emergency attend an Emergency Department as usual and if you have any concerns regarding your health, COVID or non COVID related, always contact your GP in the first instance."

Professor Karina Butler, Chair of the National Immunisation Advisory Committee, said:

"The vaccination programme has commenced for the first priority groups. The roll out has been accelerated this week. As we continue to provide vaccines across the population we urge anyone with concerns or questions to contact their GP, pharmacist or healthcare service provider for factual and reliable information. The HSE.ie website also provides reliable information around vaccine efficacy and safety."

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 3 January 2021) (incidence rate based on Census 2016 county population)

County
Today’s Cases (to midnight 3/1/21)
14-Day incidence rate per 100,000 population (14 days to midnight 3/1/21)
New Cases during last 14 days (14 days to midnight 3/1/21)
Ireland
6,110
582.8
27,754
Monaghan
51
1,119.1
687
Louth
137
1,031.2
1,329
Limerick
234
979.0
1,908
Donegal
52
832.3
1,325
Dublin
3,655
691.9
9,323
Sligo
33
671.4
440
Cavan
61
669.5
510
Mayo
111
660.5
862
Kilkenny
84
523.0
519
Meath
122
523.0
1,020
Kerry
129
522.7
772
Wexford
76
505.6
757
Laois
80
494.7
419
Clare
55
488.1
580
Carlow
51
470.7
268
Longford
30
462.4
189
Offaly
68
456.6
356
Cork
291
453.0
2,459
Galway
116
417.0
1,076
Waterford
106
414.9
482
Kildare
323
413.5
920
Roscommon
24
405.9
262
Westmeath
46
366.1
325
Leitrim
12
365.1
117
Tipperary
44
288.3
460
Wicklow
119
273.1
389
  • the 7-day incidence is 443.3 per 100,000 of population
  • the 5-day moving average is 3,568

Reporting over latest 14-day period (21/12/2020-04/01/2021)

Date reported
Reported confirmed cases
Tests processed
Positive tests detected
Positivity rate
21/12/2020
-
13,216
698
5.3%
22/12/2020
968
20,660
1,077
5.2%
23/12/2020
939
22,884
1,269
5.5%
24/12/2020
922
21,416
1,643
7.7%
25/12/2020
1,019
11,999
1,207
10.1%
26/12/2020
1,293
3,536
343
9.7%
27/12/2020
744
9,405
1,178
12.5%
28/12/2020
764
13,805
2,007
14.5%
29/12/2020
1,546
17,484
2,867
16.4%
30/12/2020
1,720
26,312
4,371
16.6%
31/12/2020
1,620
27,389
5,621
20.5%
01/01/2021
1,754
20,846
4,553
21.8%
02/01/2021
3,394
28,545
6,486
22.7%
03/01/2021
4,692
20,571
5,199
25.3%
04/01/2021
6,110
-
-
-

Detailed guidance for older people and vulnerable groups is available here.

Slides from press conference

[document 117920 ]

Hospital statistics

Total number of cases
101,887
Total number hospitalised
6,230
Total number admitted to ICU
681
Total number of deaths
2,003
Total number of healthcare workers
13,398
Number clusters notified
10,762
Cases associated with clusters
45,095
Median age
38
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Saturday 2 January.

Gender of patients

Gender
Number of cases
Male
48,526
Female
53,265
Unknown
96
Total
101,887
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Saturday 2 January.

Age range affected

Age range
Number of cases
0 - 4
2,787
5 - 14
6,812
15 - 24
18,442
25 - 34
17,783
35 - 44
15,914
45 - 54
15,113
55 - 64
11,000
65 - 74
5,721
75 - 84
4,529
85+
3,754
Unknown
32
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Saturday 2 January.

How COVID-19 is spreading

Transmission classification
%
Community transmission
36
Close contact with confirmed case
55.7
Travel abroad
1.1
Unknown
7.2
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Saturday 2 January.

Note:

When a person tests positive for COVID-19 but hasn't been abroad or had a known 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
62
5 - 14
65
15 - 24
241
25 - 34
413
35 - 44
494
45 - 54
775
55 - 64
879
65 - 74
1,110
75 - 84
1,356
85+
833
Unknown
2
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Saturday 2 January.

Cases by county

County
Number of cases
Change since the day before
Carlow
1,001
+53
Cavan
2,800
+112
Clare
2,080
+183
Cork
8,944
+350
Donegal
4,857
+194
Dublin
35,317
+1,260
Galway
3,834
+160
Kerry
2,174
+128
Kildare
4,952
+115
Kilkenny
1,783
+85
Laois
1,496
+37
Leitrim
383
+33
Limerick
4,904
+616
Longford
884
+55
Louth
3,747
+321
Mayo
2,396
+102
Meath
4,579
+247
Monaghan
2,024
+178
Offaly
1,529
+78
Roscommon
1,232
+33
Sligo
1,229
+81
Tipperary
2,102
+151
Waterford
1,575
+119
Westmeath
1,856
+71
Wexford
2,197
+140
Wicklow
2,012
+60
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Saturday 2 January.

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