There have been a further 52 Coronavirus related deaths and 866 new cases according to the figures released by the health authorities this evening.
33 of these deaths occurred in February, 12 occurred in January, 6 in December or earlier and 1 is still under investigation.
The median age of those who died was 83 years and the age range was 55 – 96 years.
22 of the new cases are in Laois, meaning the county’s 14-day incidence rate increases to 297, up from 292 yesterday.
Of the cases notified today:
- 401 are men / 463 are women
- 65% are under 45 years of age
- The median age is 35 years old
- 281 in Dublin, 63 in Galway, 56 in Kildare, 47 in Meath, 39 in Cork and the remaining 380 cases are spread across all other counties.
As of 8am today, 984 COVID-19 patients are hospitalised, of which 172 are in ICU. 44 additional hospitalisations in the past 24 hours.
As of February 8, 242,353 doses of COVID-19 vaccine have been administered in Ireland:
- 154,900 people have received their first dose
- 88,453 people have received their second dose
Dr Ronan Glynn, Deputy Chief Medical Officer, Department of Health, said: “We are cautiously optimistic about the epidemiological situation across the country. This positive momentum has been achieved through the dedication of people across the country in recent weeks.
“However, incidence and mortality rates are still very high, and the significant risk of community transmission of the virus remains, especially for those most vulnerable to COVID-19 infection. It is of vital importance that people continue to stay at home and to work from home where at all possible.”
Professor Karina Butler, Chair of the National Immunisation Advisory Committee said: “As of this week, we have administered 242,353 doses of COVID-19 vaccine. This is a wonderful achievement and I want to thank all our vaccine administration teams for their dedication and hard work.
“We hope that as our vaccination numbers go up, we can offer more protection those who are vaccinated and ultimately the wider population.
“But, until that time, all of us, including those of us who have received our COVID-19 vaccines, must maintain our adherence to all of the other public health measures like washing our hands and social distancing.”
Professor Philip Nolan, Chair of the NPHET Irish Epidemiological Modelling Advisory Group, said: “In the last week, the HSE has begun to test close contacts of confirmed cases.
“This is a positive move as it clearly shows that we are back in the containment phase of this pandemic. However, the positivity rates among household contacts is quite high, close to 30%.
“This is a timely reminder to us all to immediately isolate ourselves if we have any symptoms, to protect those most important to us. We should also continue to limit our social contacts. Do not visit another person’s household unless you are providing essential care.”
Dr Lorraine Doherty National Clinical Director Health Protection HSE – Health Protection Surveillance Centre (HPSC), said: “The COVID-19 find-test-trace-isolate’ process is vital to our efforts.
“We all need to contact our GP as soon as symptoms occur, to go for a test, trace our contacts if our test is positive and prevent further infections. It is important to remember that everyone can access testing free of charge. Testing and contact tracing are vital to our ongoing collective efforts to minimise the spread of COVID-19.”
New Cases in Laois
- February 10 – 22
- February 9 – 21
- February 8 – 10
- February 7 – 11
- February 6 – 21
- February 5 – 18
- February 4 – 15
- February 3 – 19
- February 2 – 6
- February 1 – 16
- January 31 – 27
- January 30 – 22
- January 29 – 11
- January 28 – 18
14-day case rate in Laois per 100,000 population
- February 10 – 297
- February 9 – 292.8
- February 8 – 286.9
- February 7 – 281
- February 6 – 298.7
- February 5 – 289.3
- February 4 – 288.1
- February 3 – 277.5
- February 2 – 308.2
- February 1 – 348.3
- January 31 – 383.7
- January 30 – 379
- January 29 – 421.5
- January 28 – 465.2
New cases in Laois during past 14 days
-
- February 10 – 252
- February 9 – 248
- February 8 – 243
- February 7 – 238
- February 6 – 253
- February 5 – 245
- February 4 – 244
- February 3 – 235
- February 2 – 261
- February 1 – 295
- January 31 – 325
- January 30 – 321
- January 29 – 357
- January 28 – 394
Health Minister sets September target
“Based again on the highly conditional forecasts we have, it should be possible to meet the September date” for vaccinating all adults, Health Minister Stephen Donnelly said in the Dail this afternoon.
He confirmed that the changes in allocation policy for AstraZeneca vaccine means that the vaccinations of over-70s will not be complete until mid-May.
Minister Donnelly said that this is, in effect, a two-week delay – the existing plan was only for all over-70s to have received their first dose by the end of March, which meant their second dose was only due in late April
20,000 doses of Pfizer and Moderna vaccines are being delivered to GPs next week to begin the programme for over-85s with 50,000 doses coming the week after.
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