Covid Vaccinations exceed 2 million mark as 456 further cases are recorded

almost 3 years in The Irish Times

A further 456 confirmed cases of Covid-19 have been reported by the National Public Health Emergency Team (Nphet).
No further deaths were reported, leaving the death toll at 4,937.
There is now a total of 254,450 confirmed cases of Covid-19 in the State since the pandemic began.
More than two million doses of Covid-19 vaccine have now been administered in the State, HSE chief executive Paul Reid confirmed on Thursday.
About 250,000 doses were being administered this week, and next week up to 280,000 people will be immunised, he said.
Mr Reid said there there was “joy and confidence emerging” from vaccination centres as the rollout continues.
One in seven adults are now fully vaccinated while 37 per cent have received one dose.
“It feels like we’re all feeling better, which is better for the health services,” Mr Reid told the HSE’s weekly Covid-19 briefing.
“We’re 2-0 up and it feels like we’re winning,” he said, “but many a good lead was lost in the second half of the game.”
So far, 96 per cent of those aged 85 and over have received a dose. Among 80-84 year-olds, 99 per cent have been vaccinated.
Earlier, Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly described Tánaiste Leo Varadkar’s comments on the rate of rollout by June as “very ambitious”.
Mr Varadkar, according to sources present, told Wednesday’s Fine Gael parliamentary party meeting that everyone who wants a Covid-19 vaccine appointment could be offered one by the end of June. His expectation was based on a view that around 15 per cent of the population would not seek a jab.
Asked about the report on Thursday, Mr Donnelly said he hoped the Government could “deliver on that”.
“If the vaccines that have been ordered are delivered on time then by June four out of every five people who were entitled to the vaccine will have been vaccinated. The latest analysis of figures was that everyone would have been vaccinated by September,” he told Newstalk’s Pat Kenny programme.
The Government has set a target of offering or administering a vaccine to 82 per cent of the population by the end of June. As of Monday, some 35.2 per cent (1.37 million) of people aged over 16 had received a first shot, with more than 506,000 people having received both.
Taoiseach Micheál Martin said he had been told by the HSE that the State was likely to pass the mark of 2 million vaccines being administered on Thursday.
“Another important milestone in our rollout – and tribute to the dedication of vaccines teams up and down the country,” he said in a Twitter post.
Hesitancy
When asked about vaccine hesitancy, Mr Donnelly said that the most recent research indicated that 70 per cent of people would “definitely” take the vaccine and 16 per cent “probably” would, which by international standards was “very strong”. An EU-wide survey published on Thursday shows people in Ireland are the most willing in the bloc to take the vaccine.
The Irish Times reported on Thursday that senior Government and health officials expect the National Immunisation Advisory Committee (Niac) to this week clear the way for the use of the Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca vaccines for people under 50.
Incidence rates
Wednesday’s figures showed that Donegal, which had the highest incidence of the disease in the State for some time, had been overtaken by Kildare as the county with the highest number of new cases per capita.
Mr Donnelly said the response from local communities in Donegal had been “strong” and that indicators suggested the rate of infection would continue to fall there.
He also paid tribute to all members of the Oireachtas for their response to the pandemic. Although there were some who were “hedging their bets”, he said he appreciated the support of colleagues from across the political spectrum.
He also defended his position on antigen testing and denied that he was supporting the sale of them while dismissing their efficacy. He said rapid testing had a role to play in emerging from Covid-19 restrictions.
“I’m not saying they are useless,” he said of the tests, the sale of which in supermarkets has been criticised by some Nphet members.
However, Mr Donnelly pointed out that while there was a danger that people with a negative result would think they were not infectious, if the test results were positive then antigen testing could prevent super spreader events.
Separately, the HSE said a form of Covid-19 first identified in India had been officially designated a variant of concern in Ireland.
The HSE added the B1.617.2 variant to the list of variants of concern VoCs this week and has issued new guidance in relation to it and the three others.
A variant of concern is one that is more transmissible, more lethal or that could evade the immune response.
The Indian variant has been spreading rapidly in the UK, where cases are doubling weekly from a low base. Up to last week, 20 cases had been identified in Ireland.
UK estimates suggest the variant is at least as transmissible as B.1.1.7, the UK variant that was 70 per cent more transmissible than previous variants and quickly became dominant in Ireland after Christmas.

Share it on