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Press release

Statement from the National Public Health Emergency Team - Friday 24 April


The Health Protection Surveillance Centre has today been informed that 37 people with laboratory confirmed COVID-19 in Ireland have died.

The HPSC has also been informed that, to date, 185 probable deaths have occurred. (A probable death is a death where a laboratory test has not been done but where a doctor believes a death is associated with COVID-19.)

Therefore, there have now been 1,014** confirmed COVID-19 related deaths in Ireland.

As of 1pm Friday 24 April, the HPSC has been notified of 577 new confirmed cases of COVID-19. There is now a total of 18,184 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Ireland.

The HSE is working to identify any contacts the patients may have had to provide them with information and advice to prevent further spread.

The National Public Health Emergency Team met today (Friday 24 April) to continue its ongoing review of Ireland’s response to COVID-19.

Following the meeting, NPHET recommends adopting the ECDC case definition on testing for COVID-19. The NPHET also recommends retention of the current prioritisation categories.

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

"Every indicator to date suggests that the growth of this disease has either stabilised or suppressed. This is a testament to the efforts made by every individual across Ireland over recent weeks. There is no doubt that your efforts have saved many lives.

“It shows that when public health advice is followed, we can suppress this virus in the long term. Keep going.”

**Validation of data at the HPSC has resulted in the denotification of 2 deaths. The figure of 1,014 deaths reflects this.

Today’s data from the HPSC, as of midnight, Wednesday 22 April (17,420 cases), reveals:

  • 57% are female and 43% are male
  • the median age of confirmed cases is 49 years
  • 2,486 cases (14%) have been hospitalised
  • of those hospitalised, 338 cases have been admitted to ICU
  • 4,713 cases are associated with healthcare workers
  • Dublin has the highest number of cases at 8,729 (50% of all cases) followed by Cork with 1,096 cases (6%)
  • of those for whom transmission status is known: community transmission accounts for 49%, close contact accounts for 47%, travel abroad accounts for 4%

Hospital statistics

Total number of cases
17,420
Total number hospitalised
2,486
Total number admitted to ICU
338
Total number of deaths
821
Total number of healthcare workers
4,713
Number clusters notified
548
Cases associated with clusters
4,565
Median age
49
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Wednesday 22 April 2020.

Gender of patients

Gender
Number
% of Total
Female
9,893
56.8
Male
7,457
42.8
Unknown
70
0.4
Total
17,420
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Wednesday 22 April 2020.

Age range affected

Age Group
Number
% of Total
<1
30
0.2
1 - 4
62
0.4
5 - 14
177
1
15 - 24
1,130
6.5
25 - 34
2,838
16.3
35 - 44
3,041
17.5
45 - 54
3,280
18.8
55 - 64
2,408
13.8
65+
4,431
25.4
Unknown
23
0.1
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Wednesday 22 April 2020.

How COVID-19 is spreading

Community transmission
63%
Close contact with confirmed case
33%
Travel Abroad
4%
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Wednesday 22 April 2020.

Note:

In the event that a person tests positive for COVID-19 and 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 local transmission.

Hospitalised cases by age group

Age range
Number of cases
Percentage of total
<5
14
0.6
5 - 14
8
0.3
15 - 24
53
2.1
25 - 34
155
6.2
35 - 44
210
8.4
45 - 54
343
13.8
55 - 64
379
15.2
65+
1321
53.1
Unknown
3
0.1
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Wednesday 22 April 2020.

Cases by county

Carlow
86
0.5%
Cavan
506
2.9%
Clare
206
1.2%
Cork
1096
6.3%
Donegal
440
2.5%
Dublin
8729
50.1%
Galway
331
1.9%
Kerry
271
1.6%
Kildare
954
5.5%
Kilkenny
227
1.3%
Laois
202
1.2%
Leitrim
62
0.4%
Limerick
439
2.5%
Longford
102
0.6%
Louth
536
3.1%
Mayo
391
2.2%
Meath
568
3.3%
Monaghan
318
1.8%
Offaly
217
1.2%
Roscommon
111
0.6%
Sligo
105
0.6%
Tipperary
343
2%
Waterford
122
0.7%
Westmeath
409
2.3%
Wexford
143
0.8%
Wicklow
506
2.9%
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Wednesday 22 April 2020.

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