Covid-19: Holohan praises ‘dramatic reduction’ in cases among the young

Risk of a coronavirus patient dying in ICU in the Republic is less than half of that in the UK

Chief Medical Officer Dr Tony Holohan: ‘We all need to recognise the efforts of our young people and I thank them.’ Photograph: Stephen Collins/Collins
Chief Medical Officer Dr Tony Holohan: ‘We all need to recognise the efforts of our young people and I thank them.’ Photograph: Stephen Collins/Collins

The risk of a Covid-19 patient dying in intensive care in the Republic is less than half of that in the UK, according to data from the National Public Health Emergency Team (Nphet).

Up to July, ICU mortality in the Republic was 17 per cent, compared to 24.8 per cent in the North and 40.4 per cent in the UK.

Dr Vida Hamilton, HSE group lead for acute hospitals, said the figures demonstrated how reducing demand through good public health behaviours translates into lives saved.

Hospital Report

Ireland, along with Finland, is one of just two European countries where there is negative growth in incidence of the virus, assistant chief medical officer Dr Des Hickey told the Nphet briefing. In more than half of European countries, the incidence has doubled over the past week.

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Over the past week, Ireland’s ranking in Europe for Covid-19 incidence has fallen from 17th to 24th, he pointed out.

“Level 5 efforts over the last two weeks have succeeded in further reducing community transmission and disease incidence in Ireland,” according to chief medical officer Dr Tony Holohan. “However, now is not the time to be complacent. We must keep driving down this disease – we must keep going.”

Incidence

He singled out for praise a “dramatic reduction” in cases among the 19- to 24-year-old age group in the past two weeks, where the incidence has dropped from 450 per 100,000 people to 150.

“They have also halved their contacts in the past five weeks. We all need to recognise the efforts of our young people and I thank them.”

The deaths of another three patients with Covid-19 were reported by Nphet. This brings to 1,933 the total number of deaths linked to the disease.

Nphet also reported a further 591 confirmed cases of Covid-19, bringing the total number of cases to 64,046. The new cases include 120 in Dublin, 75 in Donegal, 50 in Cork, 46 in Kerry, 44 in Limerick, with the remaining 256 cases spread across 20 other counties.

The reproduction number, which measures how many people a confirmed case goes on to infect, has fallen to between 0.7 and 0.9, according to Prof Philip Nolan, chair of the Irish Epidemiological Modelling Advisory Group.

A reproduction number of less than 1 means an epidemic is dying out; a figure greater than 1 signals it is spreading.

“This is a testament to our collective effort to stop the spread of the virus and it is very good news,” Prof Nolan said. “We may be doing better now but it is conditional on whether we keep it up. If we continue to use this time to drive the infection right down, we will be in a good position in four weeks’ time.”

Length of stay

The average length of stay of a Covid-19 patient in ICU is 17.8 days, officials disclosed.

The lower case numbers can be reduced, “the more value we can get out of that”, Dr Holohan said.

Officials could then look at what kind of additional measures were necessary beyond December 1st to ensure the spread of the disease was limited while restrictions were eased while “preserving” economic activity. While officials were giving ongoing consideration to Christmas, they were not in a position to give advice at this moment.

However, Nphet did not anticipate changing its advice on the closure of non-essential retail over the six-week period of Level 5 restrictions, he said. A review of the current measures is planned after four weeks, but “we’re not anticipating changing our advice during the six weeks”.

Paul Cullen

Paul Cullen

Paul Cullen is a former heath editor of The Irish Times.