Dublin coronavirus: positive sign as incidence rate falls in Ireland in last 24 hours



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Dublin’s COVID-19 incidence rate has dropped in the past 24 hours, in a positive sign that the virus is slowing down.

Dublin’s coronavirus case rate per 100,000 people today stands at 211.5, a drop of 0.8 from 24 hours earlier, when it stood at 219.5.

Of the 444 COVID-19 cases confirmed in Ireland today, 158 of them were in Dublin.

Currently, the average two-week incidence rate in Ireland is 212.7 per 100,000 people.

That’s a 15.3 drop compared to the day before when it was at 228.

Of the cases reported today:

  • 156 are men / 166 are women
  • 64% are under 45 years old
  • The average age is 37 years.
  • 96 in Dublin, 35 in Meath, 23 in Cork, 17 in Louth, 16 in Waterford, and the remaining 135 cases are spread over 18 other counties.

As of 2:00 p.m. today, 296 COVID-19 patients are hospitalized, of which 42 are in the ICU. 14 additional hospitalizations in the last 24 hours.

Although current trends show positive signs, Tony Holohan reminded the public that security measures must continue to address the growth of the virus.

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Dr Tony Holohan, Health Department Medical Director, said: “Due to the efforts of people across Ireland, we are seeing improvements with COVID-19. However, we must remember that maintaining this downward trend is now the most crucial. The value of our progress depends on continuing the confident behavior that led us to this position. I urge everyone to stay that way to ensure these initial trends continue. “

The R number is now between 0.7 and 0.9, according to Health Minister Stephen Donnelly this morning.

The R number is a vital metric used to measure the spread of the coronavirus, and falling below one is an important sign that transmission of the virus is slowing down.

The average number of close contacts dropped to 3 and the overall positivity rate was less than 5%.



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