Covid: Six deaths, 612 new cases with 12 in Mayo

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

All of these deaths occurred in February.

The median age of those who died was 63 years and the age range was 41 - 86 years.

There has been a total of 4,319 Covid-19 related deaths in Ireland.

As of midnight on Saturday, the HPSC has been notified of 612 new confirmed cases, bringing total to 219,592.

They include 12 in Mayo, now with 296 in the past two weeks.

It leaves the county with a 14-day incidence rate of 226.8 - above the national average of 212.2.

Mayo's five-day moving average is down to 17.

Of the other cases notified today:

300 are men and 311 are women.

72% are under 45 years of age

the median age is 32 years old.

289 in Dublin, 45 in Limerick, 34 in Longford, 33 in Galway, 26 in Kildare and the remaining 185 cases are spread across 19 other counties.

As of 8 a.m. today, 554 Covid-19 patients were hospitalised, 133 in ICU. There have been 19 additional hospitalisations in the past 24 hours.

Numbers of people vaccinated

As of last Thursday (February 25), there have been 409,529 doses of Covid-19 vaccine administered in Ireland:

271,594 people have received their first dose

137,935 people have received their second dose

Dr Ronan Glynn, Deputy Chief Medical Officer, Department of Health said: "Since the first case of Covid-19 was confirmed in Ireland last February, our lives have changed in ways we never thought possible.

"More than 6,300 people on our island have lost their lives with Covid-19.

"We remember them, and their families and friends, as well as the many people who remain seriously ill or who are dealing with long-term health issues because of this disease.

"The response of colleagues across all parts of our health system has been remarkable. We should be extraordinarily proud, and take great heart, from the dedication and resilience which has been – and continues to be - shown by everyone involved in this response.

"Almost all sectors and communities have experienced loss and have been tested in ways unimaginable to us this time last year.

"This pandemic and the public health response to it has had a profound impact on lives and livelihoods.

"But it has also demonstrated the best of us as a people, working together and buying in as a collective to what has been necessary to protect one another.

"Last spring, we met the challenge presented to us with collective enthusiasm. Ironically, while that enthusiasm has understandably waned and gone, there are more concrete reasons for hope and optimism now than at any time over the last 12 months.

"We have seen week on week reductions in case numbers over the past six weeks and we are on track to have an incidence which is amongst the lowest in Europe.

"The number of people in hospital has fallen by 38% over the past fortnight.

"We have an educated and informed public and most people continue to do most of the right things most of the time – overcoming disinformation and playing their part in solidarity with one another

"We have a dedicated and committed health workforce who have consistently stepped up to challenges as they have presented

'We have three highly effective vaccines with more on the way, supply is ramping up and we are on course to have given about 80% of adults at least one dose by the end of June

"Vaccines are already having a very positive impact here with cases falling dramatically among healthcare workers and in our nursing homes

"Evidence is mounting quickly that these vaccines, as well as stopping people getting sick, also help to stop people passing the virus onto others.

"While new variants have brought uncertainty, the existing vaccines perform well against them and work is already underway to develop booster versions should they be required.

"We still have a way to go. Our case numbers are still far too high and we must continue to do all we can to suppress this disease over the coming weeks.

"But if we can do this successfully through March, our focus will begin to turn to what we can do, rather than what we cannot."