Dublin needs ‘significant improvement’ in number of Covid cases, Oireachtas committee hears



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There needs to be a “significant improvement in Dublin” in terms of Covid-19 case numbers in the coming days, Acting Medical Director Dr. Ronan Glynn said.

He spoke at an Oireachtas Covid Committee hearing on Wednesday morning that was attended by members of the National Public Health Emergencies Team (NPHET).

Dr Glynn said that while he would only hope that the measures implemented for the capital would have an effect now, “we need to see a significant improvement in Dublin in the coming days, we are not seeing it yet.”

When asked later in the session by Dún Laoghaire TD Jennifer Carroll McNeill if she would recommend extending the current restrictions if they expire tomorrow, Dr. Glynn said she would. “The optimist in me would say that Dublin appears to be stabilizing, but that is an optimistic note. We need to see what happens in the next three or four days in particular, ”he said.

Dr Glynn said the disease is still widely dispersed in the capital, in a number of different settings, which he says is positive in one sense, as there are no major major outbreaks. “On the other hand, it makes it harder to control because there is no obvious target,” he said.

He added that, in the first instance, he wanted to see the number of cases in Dublin not increase day by day, strongly emphasizing that people throughout the capital should cut back on discretionary social activities and not go to work unless essential.

Dr. Glynn said that it was the role of every sporting, cultural and business organization to do everything possible to reduce activities that lead to mixing of people, but added: “I don’t think we’re seeing enough evidence for that.

“As an anecdote, look at the amount of traffic on the roads – it’s hard to believe people have taken seriously the message that they shouldn’t go to work unless it’s absolutely essential.”

The committee also heard evidence from Health Minister Stephen Donnelly; the director of the national virus reference laboratory, Dr. Cillian de Gascun; and the chair of the Epidemiological Modeling Advisory Group of Ireland, Prof. Philip Nolan.

When asked about the travel strategy changes, Donnelly told Labor’s Duncan Smith that NPHET’s advice was that random testing at airports was not the best use of Ireland’s testing capacity.

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