Taoiseach Says Counties Should Slow Spread As Covid-19 Rates Rise In Dublin, Donegal



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The Taoiseach has said that it is “imperative” that counties with large numbers of new Covid-19 cases reduce the spread of the virus as soon as possible.

Micheál Martin said he was particularly concerned about the 18-35 year old cohort, especially with the return of tertiary universities.

He spoke as the latest 14-day Covid-19 incidence rates released in Dublin show an increase again after a one-day decline after two weeks of spikes in infections.

The incidence rate in Dublin stood at 140.3 cases per 100,000 people on Tuesday, up from 136.9 a day earlier, following a drop of 138 cases per 100,000 on Sunday.

Increases in incidence rates were again recorded in the worst affected areas of Dublin after the daily record of brief declines, according to the latest 14-day report from the Center for Health Protection Surveillance. The rate in northwest Dublin rose again above 200 cases per 100,000 people on Tuesday, reaching 200.3 cases, while southwest Dublin reached 152.3 cases, down from 146.7 cases. . Cases in south-east Dublin stood at 150.4 cases per 100,000, compared to 143.9. The national average was 73.9 cases per 100,000, compared to 70.7.

Donegal has the next highest number of cases for a county at 122.5 cases per 100,000, up from 106.2 the day before and an increase of more than double the 45.9 cases per 100,000 reported a week earlier.

Speaking on RTÉ Radio’s News at One, Health Minister Stephen Donnelly said: Dublin, as of last night “was at 140 per 100,000 for the last 14 days, in the last seven days that figure dropped to 73, essentially what that. means is Dublin seems to be starting to stabilize, that’s what we want to see in the rest of the country as well. “

But Professor Philip Nolan, chair of NPHET’s Irish Epidemiological Modeling Advisory Group, said Wednesday night that it was “too early” to say that the spread of the disease had leveled off with the 14-day cumulative infection rate that it hadn’t risen that fast in recent times. days like it had last week.

He said at the NPHET briefing that it would be several days “or maybe another week” before it could be seen if the restrictions announced for Dublin last week were having any effect.

NPHET met on Thursday to examine the trends of the virus and also the impact of the additional restrictions imposed on Dublin last week.

Last night, the state’s acting medical director, Dr. Ronan Glynn, declined to speculate whether public health officials would recommend moving other counties where infections were high up to the Level 3 public restrictions currently imposed in Dublin.

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