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Press release

Statement from the National Public Health Emergency Team - Wednesday 13 January

The Health Protection Surveillance Centre has today been notified of 63 additional deaths related to COVID-19.

5 of these deaths occurred in November 2020, 1 of these deaths occurred in December 2020, and the remaining 56 occurred in January 2021. The date of death for one reported death remains under investigation.

There has been a total of 2,460 COVID-19 related deaths in Ireland.

As of midnight Tuesday 12 January, the HPSC has been notified of 3,569 confirmed cases of COVID-19. There has now been a total of 159,144* confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Ireland.

(*Validation of data at the HPSC has resulted in the denotification of 16 confirmed cases. The figure of 159,144 confirmed cases reflects this.)

Of the cases notified today:

  • 1,616 are men and 1,924 are women
  • 54% are under 45 years of age
  • the median age is 42 years old
  • 1,119 are in Dublin, 416 in Cork, 200 in Galway, 182 in Louth, 169 in Waterford, and the remaining 1,483 cases are spread across all other counties

As of 2pm today, 1,770 COVID-19 patients are hospitalised, of which 172 are in ICU. There have been 133 additional hospitalisations in the past 24 hours.

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

"We are seeing some early signs of progress with daily case numbers and positivity rates. We can take some hope from them, but we have a long, long way to go. In the coming weeks ahead, we will need to draw upon our reserves of resilience from springtime as we can expect to see hospitalisations, admissions to ICU and mortality related to COVID-19 increase day on day.

"The best way that we can all support one another now is to stay apart. Sadly, what we are seeing now is a result of the very high daily confirmed case numbers we experienced for successive weeks. To ensure our hospitals and loved ones remain protected, and stay alive to receive the vaccine, please continue to follow public health advice and stay home.

"At this challenging time, it is important to remind those that need acute care that hospitals are there for those that need them. No one should ignore any worrying signs that may need medical attention, such as lumps, chest pain or other new symptoms. Phone your GP if you have any concerns, not just those related to COVID-19."

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

ENDS

Today’s cases, 14-day incidence rate per 100,000 population and new cases in last 14 days (as of midnight 12 January 2021) (incidence rate based on Census 2016 county population)

County Today’s Cases (to midnight 12/1/21) 14-Day incidence rate per 100,000 population (14 days to midnight 12/1/21) New Cases during last 14 days (14 days to midnight 12/1/21)
Ireland 3,569 1448.8 68,990
Monaghan 98 2738.4 1,681
Louth 182 2323.0 2,994
Limerick 165 2068.3 4,031
Waterford 169 1841.2 2,139
Wexford 123 1746.6 2,615
Mayo 129 1688.0 2,203
Dublin 1,119 1634.1 22,017
Carlow 35 1556.2 886
Clare 59 1519.1 1,805
Cavan 66 1499.2 1,142
Cork 416 1496.9 8,126
Donegal 136 1481.9 2,359
Kilkenny 59 1205.3 1,196
Meath 73 1186.4 2,314
Sligo 14 1113.9 730
Kerry 65 1111.0 1,641
Kildare 135 1073.7 2,389
Galway 200 1049.0 2,707
Offaly 66 1021.0 796
Roscommon 27 1014.8 655
Longford 28 976.2 399
Laois 45 941.0 797
Tipperary 35 912.5 1,456
Westmeath 51 757.0 672
Wicklow 71 712.0 1,014
Leitrim <5 705.3 226
  • the 7-day incidence is 799.1
  • the 5-day moving average is 4,659

Hospital statistics

Total number of cases 155,575
Total number hospitalised 7,788
Total number admitted to ICU 811
Total number of deaths 2,195
Total number of healthcare workers 14,459
Number clusters notified 11,081
Cases associated with clusters 47,109
Median age 38
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Monday 11 January.

Gender of patients

Gender Number of cases
Male 73,926
Female 81,564
Unknown 85
Total 155,575
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Monday 11 January.

Age range affected

Age range Number of cases
0 - 4 3,835
5 - 14 9,459
15 - 24 28,490
25 - 34 28,259
35 - 44 24,613
45 - 54 23,236
55 - 64 17,838
65 - 74 8,789
75 - 84 6,235
85+ 4,781
Unknown 40
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Monday 11 January.

How COVID-19 is spreading

Transmission classification %
Community transmission 50.5
Close contact with confirmed case 40.2
Travel abroad 0.8
Unknown 8.5
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Monday 11 January.

Note:

When a person tests positive for COVID-19 but hasn't been abroad or had a known contact with another confirmed case in Ireland, that's known as community transmission.

In the event that a person who tests positive for COVID-19 can be linked to another confirmed case in Ireland, that's known as close contact.


Hospitalised cases by age group

Age range Number of cases
0 - 4 82
5 - 14 74
15 - 24 298
25 - 34 518
35 - 44 614
45 - 54 926
55 - 64 1,085
65 - 74 1,409
75 - 84 1,712
85+ 1,068
Unknown 2
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Monday 11 January.

Cases by county

County Number of cases
Carlow 1,721
Cavan 3,609
Clare 3,512
Cork 15,544
Donegal 6,454
Dublin 53,578
Galway 5,793
Kerry 3,413
Kildare 6,968
Kilkenny 2,695
Laois 2,046
Leitrim 530
Limerick 7,681
Longford 1,124
Louth 5,878
Mayo 3,966
Meath 6,304
Monaghan 3,239
Offaly 2,042
Roscommon 1,687
Sligo 1,675
Tipperary 3,265
Waterford 3,316
Westmeath 2,333
Wexford 4,358
Wicklow 2,844
  • All statistics measured at midnight on Monday 11 January.