COVID-19

Coronavirus: 94 further deaths and 1,013 new cases reported

Coronavirus: 94 further deaths and 1,013 new cases reported

Additional reporting by Tomas Doherty

94 further COVID-19 related deaths have been reported this evening by the Department of Health.

47 of those occured this month, with 44 occuing in January, 2 in December and one in November.

It brings to 3,512 the total number of COVID-19 related deaths in the Republic.

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1,013 new cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed by the National Public Health Emergency Team, with 337 in Dublin, 96 in Galway, and 60 in Cork.

In the South-East, Waterford again has the highest case numbers with 44, while there were 43 in Wexford, 16 in Tipperary, 15 in Carlow, and Kilkenny have confirmed 12 new cases of the virus.

Monaghan has the highest 14-day incidence rate in the country at 894 cases per 100,000, followed by Louth at 648 and Waterford at 642.

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Meanwhile, a further 11 people with Covid-19 have died in Northern Ireland.

Another 504 positive cases of the virus were also notified by the region's Department of Health on Wednesday.

There are 701 Covid positive inpatients in hospital in the North, 65 of whom are in intensive care.

Stormont Health Minister Robin Swann warned that Northern Ireland’s coronavirus transmission rates are still too high.

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“Infection numbers have come down but they are still too high, we must push them down further and keep them down,” he said.

“We must continue to work so our health service and its staff get the breathing space they need because they can’t continue to go on like this.”

Mr Swann has urged the public to follow restrictions, keep socially distanced and stay at home as much as possible.

“Every breach of the rules, no matter how small, can do harm, every little hurts,” he said.

“So I again urge everyone across Northern Ireland not to slip up now, not to give in now and not to surrender now. Stay focused and stay safe.”

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