Coronavirus Ireland Live Updates: 12 more people have died of Covid-19 and 236 more cases confirmed



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Follow the latest coronavirus news in Ireland and across the world on the Independent.ie live blog.

17.03 05/10/2020

Another 12 people have died of coronavirus and 236 more cases confirmed

12 more people have died of coronavirus in Ireland, the Department of Health confirmed this evening.

There have now been a total 1,458 Covid-19 related deaths in Ireland.

As of 11am this morning, another 236 people had tested positive for coronavirus, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 22,996.

17.00 05/10/2020

Dr Ciara Kelly: ‘Generation X – we’ve lived this lockdown life before’

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Back in the game: Dr Ciara Kelly at home after beating the virus. Photo: Owen Breslin

“We learnt to live with crippling boredom from our earliest memories. Unemployment. Being broke. Going nowhere. These are part of our DNA.

“So I say to you, Generation X, this is our time. This is what we have trained for. Less frail than Baby Boomers. More boring and resilient than Millennials.

“We’ve got this. We know lockdown life. We’ve lived it before. This is a second youth for us.”

16.35 05/10/2020

Nobel scientist predicts virus will ‘burn out’ in next two weeks

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Prof Michael Levitt says the numbers suggest the virus will burn out

A Nobel Prize- winning scientist has predicted, through analyzing raw data, that Ireland’s death rate and infection will “burn itself out” in the next two weeks, enabling an earlier exit from lockdown.

Professor Michael Levitt, of Stanford University, was speaking after he correctly calculated the demise of China’s spread, long ahead of most health experts.

In early February, as many scientists warned of exponential growth, Levitt forecast the total number of confirmed Covid-19 cases in China would taper out at around 80,000, with 3,250 deaths. Three months on, China has a total of 82,885 cases and 4,633 deaths – in a population of 1.4bn.

Now Prof Levitt has calculated that Ireland’s infection is burning itself out and will ‘taper off’ at around 30,000 cases and fewer than 2,400 deaths. Ireland now has 22,385 cases and 1,403 deaths.

He says the death rate is more difficult to predict, due to a number of factors, such as some countries counting coronavirus deaths in those who would normally have died from underlying health conditions.

15.35 05/10/2020

HSE calls on the poetry of President Michael D Higgins to inspire nation to persevere with physical distancing

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Irish President Michael D Higgins (Danny Lawson / PA)

The HSE is calling on the words of a poem by President Michael D Higgins to inspire people to keep going with physical distancing and other safety measures to combat the coronavirus.

It is running a new campaign called “Hold Firm”, based on a poem penned by the President in 1993.

The poem “Take Care” is part of a 60 second TV ad.

The message is: ”Now we need to motivate and inspire people to keep going with those actions that help us to stay safe and protect each other.

Staying away from the people we love and the things we enjoy is not easy. It’s not us. But, this is us – taking care of each other, supporting our colleagues on the frontline and essential services, and the people most at risk in communities all across the country. ”

The poem “Take Care” reads:

In the journey to the light,
the dark moments
should not threaten.
Belief
requires
that you hold steady.
Bend, if you will,
with the wind.
The tree is your teacher,
roots at once
more firm
from experience
in the soil
made fragile.

Your gentle dew will come
and a stirring
of power
to go on
towards the space
of sharing.

In the misery of the I,
in rage,
it is easy to cry out
against all others
but to weaken
is to die
in the misery of knowing
the journey abandoned
towards the sharing
of all human hope
and cries
is the loss
of all we know
of the divine
reclaimed
for our shared
humanity.
Hold firm.
Take care.
Come home
together.

Madagascar puts COVID-19 ‘cure’ on sale

Several African countries have put in orders for ‘COVID-19 Organics’ – a plant-based remedy championed by President Andry Rajoelina – despite WHO warnings that it is not yet proven

Madagascar is putting its self-proclaimed COVID-19 cure on sale despite warnings from the World Health Organization that the plant-based remedy is not proven.

Several African countries have already put in orders for the tonic, which President Andry Rajoelina launched last month saying it had cured two people.

On Friday, a delegation from Tanzania arrived to collect their consignment with foreign minister Palamagamba Kabudi saying Madagascar had made Africans proud.

Claims nurse contracted coronavirus in Dublin hospital after she was refused permission to wear face mask

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Physician works with critically ill patient in hospital. Stock picture

The Philippine honorary consul to Ireland has disclosed a Filipino nurse contracted the coronavirus in a Dublin hospital after she was refused permission to wear a face mask.

Raymond Garrett said that nurse infected her roommate who worked in a Dublin nursing home and a third nurse who lived with them was put at risk. In her case, the promise of hotel accommodation for health workers unable to self-isolate in their homes did not materialize.

The consul said he wanted to raise his concerns with the hospital but he did not do so because the nurse was fearful of coming forward.

The nurse had been in Ireland three months, working in a large Dublin hospital, when the first coronavirus outbreak occurred. She became infected with the virus at the end of March.

14.28 05/10/2020

China and South Korea report spikes in cases as experts worldwide watch to see how much infection rates rise in second wave

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People wear face masks in Beijing (Mark Schiefelbein / AP)

China and South Korea reported new spikes in coronavirus cases, setting off fresh concerns in countries where outbreaks had been in dramatic decline, and new protests against pandemic restrictions erupted in Germany despite the easing of many lockdowns in Europe.

In the United States, former President Barack Obama harshly criticized his successor Donald Trump’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic as an “absolute chaotic disaster”.

The United States has seen 1.3 million infections and nearly 80,000 deaths in the pandemic, the most in the world by far, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

Worldwide, health officials are anxiously watching to see just how much infection rates rise in a second wave as nations and states emerge from varying degrees of lockdown.

China reported 14 new cases on Sunday, its first double-digit rise in 10 days.

Eleven of 12 domestic infections were in the northeastern province of Jilin, which prompted authorities to raise the threat level in one of its counties, Shulan, to high risk, just days after downgrading all regions to low risk.

Authorities said the Shulan outbreak originated with a 45-year-old woman who had no recent travel or exposure history but spread it to her husband, her three sisters and other family members.

Train services in the county were being suspended.

“Epidemic control and prevention is a serious and complicated matter, and local authorities should never be overly optimistic, war-weary or off-guard,” said the Jilin Communist Party secretary, Bayin Chaolu.

Jilin also shares a border with North Korea, which insists it has no virus cases, much to the disbelief of international health authorities.

South Korea reported 34 more cases as new infections linked to nightclub-goers threatens the country’s hard-won gains against the virus.

It was the first time that South Korea’s daily infections were above 30 in about a month.

President Moon Jae-in said citizens must neither panic nor let down their guard, but warned that “the damage to our economy is indeed colossal as well”.

Across Europe, many nations were easing lockdowns even further on Monday even as they prepared to clamp down on any new infections.

Germany, which managed to push daily new infections below 1,000 before deciding to loosen restrictions, has seen regional spikes in cases linked to slaughterhouses and nursing homes.

By Saturday, the country’s public health authority said new infections were above 1,000 again.

German officials have expressed concerns about the growing number of large demonstrations, including one in the southwestern city of Stuttgart that drew thousands of participants.

Police in Berlin stepped in on Saturday after hundreds of people failed to respect social distancing measures at anti-lockdown rallies in the German capital.

Chancellor Angela Merkel and the governors of Germany’s 16 states last week cleared the way for restaurants, hotels and remaining stores to reopen.

The country’s football league resumes next week, despite a number of professional players testing positive for Covid-19, and more students are returning to school beginning on Monday.

France, which has a similar number of infections as Germany but a far higher death toll, is also letting some younger students return to school Monday after almost two months out.

Attendance will not be compulsory right away, leaving parents to make the difficult decision of whether it is safe to send their children back to school or not.

Residents in some Spanish regions will be able to enjoy limited seating at bars, restaurants and other public places beginning on Monday but Madrid and Barcelona, ​​the country’s largest cities, will remain shut down.

Mandatory quarantine for UK arrivals ‘makes sense’ to hold back a second surge

A 14-day quarantine for travelers coming into the UK should have been brought in long ago, but could help the country now as it faces a “knife-edge balancing act” coming out of lockdown, an expert said.

The Government will reportedly enforce the mandatory quarantine for all UK arrivals within weeks as part of measures aimed at avoiding a second peak of the coronavirus pandemic.

It is thought the measure will be announced by Prime Minister Boris Johnson as part of his address to the nation on Sunday evening.

Dr Peter Drobac, a medical doctor specializing in infectious diseases and an academic at the University of Oxford, said there is merit to the idea, but said it will require a lot of planning and infrastructure at a “really fragile” stage.

Crisis in our nursing homes: It’s time to ask the hard questions

Now that the spread of the coronavirus has been contained, questions mount about the preparedness of the country for a crisis that has claimed more than 1,400 lives and infected 22,500.

Shock has given way to a questioning of what just happened. Paul Bell, the Louth county councilor and organizer for Siptu, has identified at a “developing anger” among frontline workers. The 42,000 health workers represented by the union in care homes, hospitals and other health care settings are “beginning to catch their breath”, he says.

“There is a high degree of concern and developing anger about what happened in nursing homes and residential settings, and the fatalities,” he said.

“And a lot of our members are asking the question: why 6,700 health workers tested Covid-19 positive and why have five of us died?”

13.15 05/10/2020

Coronavirus Ireland: five healthcare staff have passed away from illness and over 3,000 are currently on Covid-related leave

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HSE chief operations officer Anne O’Connor (Photocall Ireland)

Five healthcare staff have passed away from the coronavirus while over a further 3,000 are on Covid-19 related leave.

Healthcare staff remain a “priority group” for testing and may be tested several times as the HSE’s testing strategies evolve.

“It remains five as reported at the daily press conference in the evening, so yes, sadly five healthcare workers in total have passed away from Covid-19,” said Dr Colm Henry at the weekly HSE Covid-19 briefing this afternoon.

He said that testing remains a “concern” for healthcare workers.

12.26 05/10/2020

HSE predicts cost of PPE will be € 1 billion in one year

11.01 05/10/2020

Weekly HSE briefing from the Mater Hospital in Dublin, which has been “at the forefront” of the pandemic

HSE CEO Paul Reid:

  • there is “uncertainty” if a second wave will take place as restrictions are lifted
  • as restrictions are lifted, hospitals cannot be maxed out, vulnerable groups must be supported and the cost of investing in PPE and contact tracing is one “we have to face”
  • numbers in ICU continue to trend down, confirmed cases also has been reducing.They are down 55pc compared to the peak. Bed occupancy has increased in hospitals as non-Covid patients are treated
  • non-Covid services are now being resumed, but this “won’t be easy”. Three priorities – maintain focus on Covid patients by capacity levels kept at 80pc to allow for surges, protect healthcare workers through international advice and use the capacity in public and private hospitals
  • Cancer services will be prioritized as well as time dependent surgeries
  • campaigns and radio adverts will kick off next week encouraging people who have symptoms to seek help
  • “on schedule” to deliver 100,000 tests a week from May 18
  • 120 staff actively involved in contact tracing with routine cases
  • PPE: 3m items of PPE were distributed over the last week. Demand for 200,000 masks per day has now risen to 1.2m – 120m masks will be delivered from South Korea
  • “very unpredictable road” still ahead

HSE COO Anne O’Connor:

  • 1.8pc increase on ED attendances, but still over 20pc down compared to this time last year
  • 27 waiting on trolleys, 310 people who were delayed in hospital discharges due to Covid outbreaks in residential care settings
  • 72 people in ICU last night
  • 47 community testing sites in place with 30 open
  • 242 requests this week were made for staff accommodation; with 3,010 staff absent on Covid-related leave

Dr Colm Henry

  • 70pc of the total number of cases have recovered in a community setting

Q + A

10.46 05/10/2020

Coronavirus cases reach four million worldwide

Coronavirus has infected more than 4 million people and killed over 279,000, according to a tally kept by Johns Hopkins University.

A total of over 277,000 have died worldwide while more than 1.3 million have recovered from the virus.

South Korea’s president urges calm amid concerns over new coronavirus emerges

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South Korean President Moon Jae-in (Kim Min-Hee / AP)

South Korea’s president is urging citizens not to let their guard down, but said there is no reason to panic amid fears of a new surge in the coronavirus outbreak in the country.

President Moon Jae-in made the comments in a speech on Sunday as his health authorities detected a slew of new cases linked to nightclubs in Seoul’s Itaewon district in recent days.

Officials on Friday said they detected at least 15 infections linked to a 29-year-old man who had visited three Itaewon clubs before testing positive on Wednesday.

Earlier, South Korea’s caseload had been waning for weeks, prompting authorities to relax their social distancing rules.

“The infection cluster which recently occurred in entertainment facilities has raised awareness that, even during the stabilization phase, similar situations can arise again anytime, anywhere in an enclosed, crowded space,” President Moon Jae-in said.

Pandemic brings outbreaks of bullying and ostracism in Japan

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A woman wearing a face mask cleans the menus of a restaurant in Tokyo (Eugene Hoshiko / AP)

The coronavirus in Japan has brought not just an epidemic of infections, but also an onslaught of bullying and discrimination against the sick, their families and health workers.

A government campaign to raise awareness seems to be helping, at least for medical workers.

But it has made only limited headway in countering the harassment and shunning that may be discouraging people from seeking testing and care and hindering the battle against the pandemic.

Apart from fear of infection, experts say the prejudice against those even indirectly associated with the illness also stems from deeply rooted ideas about purity and cleanliness in a culture that rejects anything deemed to be alien, unclean or troublesome.

09.26 05/10/2020

ASTI confirms it will engage with the calculated grades process for Leaving Cert

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Issues: ASTI president Deirdre McDonald

Education Editor Katherine Donnelly reports

The secondary teachers’ union, ASTI, has confirmed it will engage with the calculated grades process for the Leaving Cert, but says students should receive the full marks for the canceled oral and practical exams.

The issue of the 100pc for orals and practicals is among a number of “major concerns” that the union says it wants to address “as matter of urgency”.

The ASTI delivered its verdict on the calculated grades process after a meeting of its Standing Committee which went on for about 12 hours, over two evenings.

Previously, the other second-level teachers’ union, TUI, announced that it would support the calculated grades system, but said it was seeking clarification on a number of issues.

09.02 05/10/2020

Three members of White House coronavirus task force enter quarantine

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White House coronavirus response co-ordinator Dr Deborah Birx listens as director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Dr Anthony Fauci speaks during a coronavirus response meeting (Evan Vucci / AP)

Three members of the White House coronavirus task force, including Dr Anthony Fauci, have placed themselves in quarantine after coming into contact with someone who tested positive for Covid-19.

Dr Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and a leading member of the task force, has become nationally known for his simple and direct explanations to the public about the coronavirus.

Dr Fauci’s institute said that he has tested negative for Covid-19 and will continue to be tested regularly.

It added that he is considered at “relatively low risk” based on the degree of his exposure, and that he would be “taking appropriate precautions” to mitigate the risk to personal contacts while still carrying out his duties.

WATCH: Businesses that do not comply with Covid-19 safety measures will be shut down

Business Minister Heather Humphreys said inspectors from the Health and Safety Authority will be able to shut down workplaces that do not comply. She was speaking at the launch of the Government’s Return to Work safety protocol for workplaces to reopen once the lockdown lifts.

They include regulations for social distancing, hand hygiene, first aid and mental health support for returning workers.

08.10 05/10/2020

‘Covid has cost me millions but I can’t complain’

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TRANQUILITY: John McColgan and wife Moya are staying in their cottage overlooking the Baily Lighthouse in Howth. Photo: Gerry Mooney

The Aer Lingus flight out of JFK at 9pm on March 13 to Dublin wasn’t a happy one for John McColgan. On the journey home he was consumed with “how best to work our way out of this”, he says.

The previous day hadn’t started too badly, despite the number of Covid-19 cases in New York rising all the time.

He had had lunch in Manhattan with his friend, the actor Gabriel Byrne.

That evening John went as usual to Radio City Music Hall on Sixth Avenue to oversee Riverdance – the global phenomenon he created with his wife Moya Doherty and Bill Whelan 25 years ago. During that night’s show the great impresario received the bad news from the promoter Jim Glancey. It would be the last performance of Riverdance for the foreseeable future.

Top official casts doubt over plans to reopen schools

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Seán Ó Foghlú said report was a working document. Photo: Tom Burke

The Department of Education’s most senior official has raised major doubts about schools being able to reopen in September, the Sunday Independent can reveal.

Secretary general Sean O Foghlu told Opposition TDs during a teleconference on Friday that there would be significant accommodation challenges presented by having to operate smaller class sizes to comply with public health guidelines in schools.

Three people on the call said Mr O Foghlu was not optimistic about reopening schools in September as planned under the Government’s roadmap. One suggested that his remarks raised the prospect of installing prefabs in schools across the country in order to ensure socially distanced classrooms.

The department said decisions on reopening schools would be underpinned by public health advice, the return-to-work protocol published yesterday and other countries’ experiences.

Reality bites: Watchdog warns on tax hikes and pension age as recession kicks in

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Business Minister Heather Humphreys (Leon Farrell/Photocall Ireland/PA)

he next government will have to consider tax hikes and spending cuts to deliver an economic recovery, the State’s budget watchdog has warned.

With unemployment close to 30pc and the cost of the State’s emergency measures now at over €13bn and rising, Fianna Fail, Fine Gael and the Greens are this weekend being told to reconsider the “very risky” proposal to keep the pension age at 66, as well as look at increases in property and inheritance taxes in programme for government talks.

The dire warnings came from the chair of the Irish Fiscal Advisory Council, Sebastian Barnes, who said the State is now facing the “most dramatic” recession in its history. His comments came as it emerged yesterday that the Department of Education’s most senior official has raised major doubts about being able to reopen schools in September.

Online Editors

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