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Chief Medical Officer Dr Tony Holohan Sasko Lazarov/RollingNews.ie

Coronavirus: 12 more deaths announced as Ireland's Covid-19 death toll passes 2,000

The sobering milestone has been reached following the release of the latest figures from NPHET this evening.

MORE THAN 2,000 people in Ireland have now died after being diagnosed with Covid-19.

The Department of Health confirmed this evening that a further 12 people have died, bringing the total number of deaths to 2,006. 

The Department also confirmed 379 additional cases of Covid-19 in Ireland, bringing the total number of cases to 69,058.

Commenting on the milestone of 2,000 deaths being reached, Chief Medical Officer Dr Tony Holohan noted how much the pandemic has impacted on families and communities across the country.

“It is important that we continue to work together if we are to suppress this virus and protect as many people as possible,” Holohan said.

“For the next two weeks, work from home, stay at home and follow public health advice.”

2,000 deaths 

This evening’s sobering milestone comes following an increase in deaths of people diagnosed with coronavirus in recent months as Ireland copes with the second wave of the pandemic. 

The first death of a person diagnosed with Covid-19 – of a woman in the east of the country – was confirmed on 11 March, the same day the World Health Organization (WHO) classified Covid-19 as a pandemic. 

The number of cases and deaths grew exponentially as the virus spread across Ireland in the early spring.

By 1 June, 1,650 people had lost their lives to Covid-19.

Restrictions at the time meant that many family members, friends and loved ones could not properly celebrate the lives of those they had lost. 

Lifting lockdown

The strictest public health measures were eased from late May, and the spread of the virus was suppressed.

The number of deaths from Covid-19 in Ireland also started to decrease rapidly as a result. No more than nine deaths were recorded across the whole of August. 

But even during that month cases were increasing again -  reaching a record high on 18 October when 1,283 cases were reported.

The number of deaths initially remained low, and additional ‘lockdown’ measures introduced in recent months have been credited by health officials with keeping enough capacity in the health system to successfully treat severe cases. 

HSE Chief Clinical Officer Dr Colm Henry said the decreased mortality rate in Ireland matches similar patterns observed across Europe. 

In March and April, when Ireland’s testing and tracing programme was only beginning, the positivity rate of people coming forward for tests was 25% whereas it currently stands at 4%, said Dr Henry.

In other words, the virus was far more widespread at that time. 

“In addition, there was a bias towards testing older people,” Dr Henry told TheJournal.ie. As the health system mobilised to add capacity in the early days and weeks of the pandemic, tests could only be provided to those in vulnerable groups who were also showing symptoms of the disease. 

As the HSE raced to stem the spread of Covid-19, nursing homes were particularly vulnerable, resulting in the deaths of many older people across Ireland. 

The elderly and those with underlying health conditions are more vulnerable to the virus than most. Data released by the Central Statistics Office in May showed that almost 92% of confirmed Covid-19 deaths occurred in people aged over 65. 

“The other thing now is that older people are protecting themselves more and they’ll probably be protected more too,” said Dr Henry. 

In addition, improved treatments such as antiviral and anti-inflammatory drugs have been increasingly used to treat people, including the elderly, who contract Covid-19. 

002 Health Brief Sasko Lazarov Sasko Lazarov

Daily figures 

The daily number of deaths from Covid-19 announced each day during the pandemic does not mean the deaths occurred on that particular day. 

There is often a lag in confirming mortality as a result of the virus. In the early days of Covid-19, public health officials urged family members to report their loved ones deaths as early as possible so that health services could better understand the effects of the virus and gain a more accurate picture of mortality.

Members of NPHET have sounded warnings in recent days as the number of cases and mortality rates have increased. 

There were 36 deaths from Covid-19 in September and 119 in October. So far this month, 75 people have died from the virus.

“We are concerned the positive trajectory we had has at best stalled and is in fact deteriorating,” Deputy Chief Medical Officer Dr Ronan Glynn said earlier this week.

He added that there was only a short time “to turn this around” by focusing on the basic public health messages of social distancing, hand-washing and wearing a face covering. 

The Government announced earlier this year that national and local events to commemorate those we have lost during Covid-19 will take place in the near future. 

Collaborating with the media, civil society organisations and church groups on the approach and timing, it is expected these events will take place at some point next year.

Of the cases notified today;

  • 174 are men and 203 are women;
  • 64% are in people under the age of 45;
  • The median age is 36 years old;
  • 116 cases are in Dublin, 38 are in Donegal, 30 are in Meath, 27 are in Cork, 22 are in Limerick, 22 are in Louth, and the remaining 124 cases are spread across all other counties.

As of 2pm today 282 patients were in hospital, of which 33 are in intensive care units. Health officials also said there have been 22 additional hospitalisations in the past 24 hours.

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    Mute Pat Forster
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    Aug 24th 2022, 8:24 AM

    If the stream is so polluted and the only solution is deemed to be the use of bleach, there is something very wrong with the council employees’ thought processes.

    206
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    Mute Bramley Hawthorne
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    Aug 24th 2022, 8:22 AM

    Tracking and stopping the source of the pollution in a stream would be too much trouble.

    169
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    Mute Brendan Gordon
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    Aug 24th 2022, 8:41 AM

    @Bramley Hawthorne: This is Water infrastructure, you start from the symptoms and work back, then give up and just keep paying lip service to the symptoms regardless of the actual state of things. In fairness we’re lucky they didn’t just start charging for use of the beaches.

    43
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    Mute Boyne Sharky
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    Aug 24th 2022, 7:21 AM

    Insane. These streams might be polluted, well lets make sure and dump a load of chemicals into them. And these people are in charge…?

    200
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    Mute Paul Gorry
    Favourite Paul Gorry
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    Aug 24th 2022, 12:30 AM

    I’d rather buy a bottle of water in aldi. Haven’t drank water from a council running tap for years now. Always boil yer water folks just for safe measure.

    93
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    Mute Colette Kearns
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    Aug 24th 2022, 12:59 AM

    I’ve been saying about the amount of chlorine in our drinking water for years now it’s disgusting it smells like a swimming pool. Then add a dose of fluoride, have had to buy bottled water for about 12 years now maybe more!

    91
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    Mute G man
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    Aug 24th 2022, 8:30 AM

    @Colette Kearns: i regularly test water mains for chlorine as a control test for testing the chlorine levels of a spa swimming pool, Ive never had the control test show the presence of chlorine. Mind you thats not to say there aren’t other chemicals present such as flouride

    86
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    Mute David Dineen
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    Aug 24th 2022, 8:44 AM

    @G man: a sane response on jouranal! I must be getting old..

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    Mute Steve O'Hara-Smith
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    Aug 24th 2022, 11:25 AM

    @Colette Kearns: I use a reverse osmosis filter for all drinking and cooking water. The last time I did an analysis the water rain in the rain butt was purer than the unfiltered tap water.

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    Mute Tommy Roche
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    Aug 24th 2022, 11:38 AM

    @G man: Not sure what source the spa is taking water from, but chlorine is added to virtually all public water supply with the exception of some group water schemes.

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    Mute paul johnson
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    Aug 24th 2022, 2:20 PM

    @David Dineen: yea you are you look ancient

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    Mute Sean
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    Aug 24th 2022, 8:29 AM

    Waterford has backed it’s own decision but it is time to reconsider. It is a stream not a swimming pool. And be a bit more transparent also. Someone shouldn’t have to smell bleach for this issue to come to light.

    53
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    Mute Steve O'Hara-Smith
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    Aug 24th 2022, 11:28 AM

    Crazy! Work upstream with a testing kit and eliminate the sourc(es) of the pollution “disinfecting” a living stream is an obscenity.

    42
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    Mute Johannes Baader
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    Aug 24th 2022, 8:35 AM

    Are you for real??

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    Mute Glen Kearns
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    Aug 24th 2022, 6:23 PM

    Hazard Statement H400. ” Very Toxic to aquatic life”. That’s from the Material Safety Data Sheet for Sodium Hypochloride. Case Closed.

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    Mute Gary Kearney
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    Aug 25th 2022, 10:02 AM

    @Glen Kearns: Aloho is listened as a poison but people drink in in lesser strengths. Same with this stuff.

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    Mute thesaltyurchin
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    Aug 24th 2022, 12:40 PM

    “now hands that do dishes can feel soft as your face”… because chemicals are melting them. Lol.

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