Holohan urges caution on after-school activities as 1293 more Covid-19 cases are confirmed
Chief medical officer Dr Tony Holohan has urged parents of children returning to school this week to be cautious about participating in after-school activities as a further 1,293 cases of Covid-19 were confirmed in the State.
The Department of Health said 382 Covid-19 patients were hospitalised as of midnight on Sunday, of which 61 were in ICU.
The latest figures come as thousands of primary and secondary schools across the State reopen this week.
Dr Holohan said: âAs many children return to classrooms across the country today, it is important to highlight to both children and their parents that considerable preparations have been made across the country to reopen schools safely.
âOur data clearly shows that, to date, the school environment was not a major source of disease transmission,â he tweeted.
âIn order to go back to school as safely as possible, my advice to children is to wash your hands or use hand sanitiser regularly and follow the protocols operating in your school.
âParents, please keep in mind the symptoms to look out for and do not send your child to school if they display any of them, instead help them to isolate and contact you GP for advice and arrange a test if appropriate.
âI would also urge caution when participating in activities with classmates outside the school environment, which have proven to be settings where outbreaks & transmission in children have occurred in the past. This will help to prevent further transmission & potential outbreaks.â
Social contactsSeparately, National Public Health Emergency Team (Nphet) member Prof Philip Nolan urged parents to âmoderateâ their social contacts.
An increase in the incidence of Covid-19 among children after school reopening depends in part on the effectiveness of school mitigation measures, he said, while another factor was whether adults increase their contacts or return to the workplace.
Confirmed cases in hospital Confirmed cases in ICU 382 60âThe successful return to school depends on the hard work of all to put those mitigation measures in place, the strict exclusion of the symptomatic, parents moderating their social contacts especially in the first few weeks, and careful monitoring,â he said on Monday.
Earlier, HSE chief executive Paul Reid said the latest data on Covid-19 hospitalisations was a âstrong reminderâ that coronavirus was still causing illness.
âVaccination offers strong protection but itâs still important to be conscious of the risks by continuing public health measures. These provide protection too,â he said.
Mr Reid said 88 per cent of adults were now âfully protectedâ having received a vaccine against Covid-19.
âFurther protections provided this weekend in âwalk inâ vaccination centres. 14,000, more vaccines administered (7,200 yesterday). A total of over 134,000 administered via walk in centres to date,â he tweeted.
âNow 6.8M vaccines administered here. 88% of adults are now fully protected.â
Northern IrelandIn Northern Ireland, six more people with Covid-19 have died from Covid-19, the Northâs department of health reported on Monday.
A further 1,259 people tested positive for the virus.
Hospital trusts in the North warned their emergency departments (EDs) were under âextreme pressureâ for the second day in a row on Monday and urged people only to come to A&E if it was an emergency.
The Western Health and Social Care Trust tweeted on Monday that emergency departments in both Altnagelvin Hospital in Derry and the South West Acute Hospital in Enniskillen were âvery busyâ.
In Altnagelvin over 60 people were waiting in the ED and 24 waiting to be admitted to hospital, while in Enniskillen there were 47 people in ED and 21 waiting admission.
âPlease only come to ED if you have a medical or mental health emergency,â the hospital said.
The Northern Health and Social Care Trust said EDs at both Antrim Area and the Causeway hospital in Coleraine were âextremely busyâ with a âconsiderable number of people awaiting beds.
âDelays are inevitable and we apologise for this,â the hospital said.
The Ulster Hospital in Dundonald and Craigavon Area Hospital in Co Armagh also warned of pressures on their emergency departments.
Dr Alan Stout from the British Medical Association told the BBC some of those waiting were âvery, very sick patientsâ and the delays were due to a combination of the demands of Covid-19, the prevalence of conditions which had gone untreated during the pandemic, and already long waiting lists.
âWeâre struggling, full stop, to deal with this,â he said. âIt is creating a very, very difficult position and a very, very concerning position because weâre still in August.â
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