6,110 Covid-19 cases and six further deaths reported

There has been a further six deaths from Covid-19 and 6,110 confirmed cases reported by the Health Protection Surveillance Centre today.

There has been a total of 2,265 Covid-19 related deaths in Ireland and a total of 107,997 confirmed cases in Ireland.

Of the cases notified today:

2,911 are men and 3,195 are women, 63% are under 45 years of age with the median age at 36-years-old

3,655 in Dublin, 323 in Kildare, 291 in Cork, 234 in Limerick, 137 in Louth and the remaining 1,470 cases are spread across all other counties including Meath which reported 122 cases, down from the 238 cases reported yesterday.

As of 2pm today, 776 COVID-19 patients are hospitalised, of which 70 are in ICU. There have been 92 additional hospitalisations in the past 24 hours.

Dr. Tony Holohan, Chief Medical Officer, Department of Health, said:

"Leaders and organisations in communities across the country now need to support their colleagues, neighbours, family and friends to keep to the spirit of public health advice. We must restrict our movements, we have to limit the people we interact with outside of our households, if we are to suppress the virus and sustain our essential services."

Dr. Ronan Glynn, Deputy Chief Medical Officer, Department of Health, said:

"People particularly vulnerable to COVID-19 include older persons and people with pre-existing medical conditions including cardiovascular disease, obesity, diabetes, chronic respiratory disease and cancer. The incidence of disease in the community is now at a level where vulnerable people need to stay at home unless absolutely essential."

Professor Philip Nolan, Chair of the NPHET Irish Epidemiological Modelling Advisory Group, said:

"Scenario models raise the possibility of 1,500-2,000 people in hospital, and 200-400 people in ICU by mid-January, if we do not act to radically reduce transmission and incidence. It will take all of us, adopting the public health measures of staying home and reducing contacts, to suppress current levels of disease."

Mr. Liam Woods, HSE National Director, Acute Operations, said:

"We are introducing curtailments in non-essential services in adult hospitals in order to cope with increasing COVID-19 admissions. This will be subject to ongoing review. In the event of emergency attend an Emergency Department as usual and if you have any concerns regarding your health, COVID or non COVID related, always contact your GP in the first instance."

Professor Karina Butler, Chair of the National Immunisation Advisory Committee, said:

"The vaccination programme has commenced for the first priority groups. The roll out has been accelerated this week. As we continue to provide vaccines across the population we urge anyone with concerns or questions to contact their GP, pharmacist or healthcare service provider for factual and reliable information. The HSE.ie website also provides reliable information around vaccine efficacy and safety."

The most recent 14-day incidence rates per 100,000 population by Local Electoral Area (LEA) (15/12/2020 to 28/12/2020) for Meath showed Kells with 35 conformed cases per 100,000 of population; Trim with 104; Ashbourne with 44; Ratoath with 108; Navan with 55; Laytown/Bettystown with 107.