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Statement from the National Public Health Emergency Team

The Health Protection Surveillance Centre has today been notified of 52 additional deaths related to COVID-19.

50* of these deaths occurred in January.

The median age of those who died is 82 years and the age range is 39-99 years.

There has been a total of 2,870 COVID-19 related deaths in Ireland.

As of midnight, Thursday 21st January, the HPSC has been notified of 2,371 confirmed cases of COVID-19. There is now a total of 184,279** confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Ireland. 

Of the cases notified today:

  • 1,129 are men / 1,194 are women
  • 57% are under 45 years of age
  • The median age is 40 years old
  • 757 in Dublin, 237 in Cork, 154 in Waterford, 123 in Wexford, 114 in Louth, and the remaining 986 cases are spread across all other counties***. 

As of 2pm today, 1,931 COVID-19 patients are hospitalised, of which 219 are in ICU. 78 additional hospitalisations in the past 24 hours.

Dr Tony Holohan, Chief Medical Officer said: “We know that the ongoing restrictions are very challenging for people but, through the hard work and sacrifice of the vast majority of people, we are starting to see the first signs of a lower prevalence of the disease in the population. Strictly adhering to the public health measures is the key to making real progress in terms of flattening the curve and lowering the current trends in our hospitals and ICUs.

“The ‘COVID-19 find-test-trace-isolate’ process is vital to our efforts. Our data is telling us that for a third of people, it’s 4 days or more from the time they first experience symptoms of COVID-19 to the time they get tested. We all need to contact our GP as soon as symptoms occur, so we can trace our contacts and prevent further infections.

“This weekend, we need everyone to stay the course with hand washing, covering coughs, wearing face coverings and keeping a 2m distance. In order to take care of each other, we need all to stay at home, except for essential reasons, to minimise the spread of COVID-19 to ourselves and our loved ones.”

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

 *There are 2 deaths where the date of death is under investigation.

**Validation of data at the HPSC has resulted in the denotification of 14 confirmed cases. The figure of 184,279 confirmed cases reflects this.

***County data should be considered provisional as the national Computerised Infectious Disease Reporting System (CIDR) is a dynamic system and case details are continually being validated and updated.

Today’s cases, 14-day incidence rate per 100,000 population and new cases in last 14 days (as of midnight 21 January 2021) (incidence rate based on Census 2016 county population)

 

County

Today's cases***

(to midnight 21Jan2021)

14-day incidence rate per 100,000 population (to 21Jan2021)

New Cases during last 14 days

(to 21Jan2021)

Ireland

2,371

 1,017.1

 48,433

Monaghan

90

 1,974.4

 1,212

Waterford

154

 1,567.4

 1,821

Louth

114

 1,540.1

 1,985

Wexford

123

 1,529.5

 2,290

Mayo

68

 1,465.8

 1,913

Carlow

31

 1,461.4

 832

Limerick

96

 1,221.7

 2,381

Dublin

757

 1,087.1

 14,647

Cork

237

 1,002.8

 5,444

Donegal

32

 975.6

 1,553

Galway

103

 968.8

 2,500

Cavan

30

 962.2

 733

Clare

35

 914.0

 1,086

Meath

96

 892.6

 1,741

Kilkenny

28

 830.4

 824

Tipperary

67

 829.2

 1,323

Kildare

95

 782.0

 1,740

Roscommon

6

 773.1

 499

Laois

17

 763.9

 647

Offaly

15

 676.0

 527

Wicklow

59

 591.9

 843

Kerry

35

 580.2

 857

Sligo

21

 491.3

 322

Westmeath

32

 478.8

 425

Longford

22

 452.6

 185

Leitrim

8

 321.4

 103

 

7-day incidence 372.6

5-day moving average 2,315