Statement from the Health Protection Surveillance Centre:

The Health Protection Surveillance Centre has today been notified of 6 additional deaths related to COVID-19.

There has been a total of 1,908 COVID-19 related deaths in Ireland.

As of midnight Thursday 29th October the HPSC has been notified of 772 confirmed cases of COVID-19. There is now a total of 61,059* confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Ireland.

Of the cases notified today;

  • 362 are men / 406 are women
  • 64% are under 45 years of age
  • The median age is 36 years old
  • 228 in Dublin, 120 in Cork, 50 in Meath, 41 in Donegal, 41 in Galway and the remaining 292 cases are spread across all remaining counties.

As of 2pm today 325 COVID-19 patients are hospitalised, of which 42 are in ICU. 15 additional hospitalisations in the past 24 hours.

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

The overall situation has improved, but we have to remember that these are very early days. This improvement will only be maintained if we keep going in our efforts.

We have to remember that incidence is increasing in older age groups, who are particularly vulnerable to this disease. The way in which we can protect them is if we continue to drive down transmission across the whole population.

Dr. Desmond Hickey, Deputy Chief Medical Officer, Department of Health said;

As of today, Ireland has seen a reduction in its 7-day incidence rate of 36% when compared to the previous 7 days. Ireland’s progress is notable when compared to the rapidly deteriorating picture across Europe. It is paramount that we sustain and continue to drive down disease incidence as much as possible in the coming weeks.

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

The reproduction number is now close to 1.0 nationally. This is the first time in a number of weeks that we have been able to report positive indicators of the disease. However, our experience to date shows this type of progress is very fragile. We should take these positive signs as an indication our efforts are starting to work, the critical thing now is to keep it up, the virus will seek out any opportunity to spread; over the next weeks let’s make sure we don’t give it that opportunity, by driving R and case numbers as low as possible.

Dr Colm Henry, Chief Clinical Officer, HSE, said;

There has been a significant reduction in emergency presentations and admission in recent weeks, when compared with activity last year. Our Emergency Departments have in place pathways of care to keep patients and staff safe. If you need urgent or emergency care in our hospitals, this care can be provided safely.

The COVID-19 Dashboard provides up-to-date information on the key indicators of COVID-19 in the community. 

*Validation of data at the HPSC has resulted in the denotification of 10 confirmed cases. The figure of 61,059 confirmed cases reflects this.

Today’s cases, 14-day incidence rate per 100,000 population and new cases in last 14 days (as of midnight 29 October 2020) (incidence rate based on Census 2016 county population)

CountyToday’s cases

(to midnight 29OCT2020)

14-Day incidence rate per 100,000 population

(16OCT2020 to 29OCT2020)

New Cases during last 14 days

(16OCT2020 to 29OCT2020)

IRELAND772287.113,672
Cavan16669.5510
Meath50546.51,066
Westmeath24413.4367
Sligo9363.2238
Galway41341.4881
Cork120336.51,827
Donegal41322.3513
Limerick38313.5611
Monaghan12304.6187
Longford8296.0121
Kildare37293.0652
Louth29292.5377
Carlow<5289.8165
Kerry13272.8403
Clare14255.9304
Dublin228251.63,390
Wexford<5241.8362
Roscommon13241.7156
Mayo18240.6314
Offaly14236.0184
Laois11233.8198
Waterford12212.6247
Kilkenny5151.2150
Wicklow9139.7199
Tipperary<5132.2211
Leitrim<5121.739

Note for Editors: The lowest national 14-day incidence rate was on 3rd July 2020 when the rate was 2.98 cases per 100,000 population.


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