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Irish Mirror
Irish Mirror
National
Colin Brennan

Covid-19 Ireland update: Welcome drop as 744 new cases and 4 more deaths confirmed

A total of 744 more people have tested positive for coronavirus in Ireland, while 4 more deaths have been confirmed.

The latest figures were announced by the Department of Health this afternoon.

Pictured are Chair of the Covid-19 vaccination taskforce Professor Brian MacCraith, Chairperson of the High-Level Task Force , Minister for Health, Stephen Donnelly TD , Paul Reid, Country Manager, Pfizer Healthcare Ireland and Paul Reid, CEO, HSE (Marc O'Sullivan)

Covid-19 vaccinations in Ireland will likely get underway on December 29 a day earlier than originally planned, HSE chief Paul Reid has said .

Pressure has been mounting on the Irish health service to start inoculations straight away after the first doses of the Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine arrived here on St Stephen’s Day.

However, inoculations will not start until later this week, as HSE director-general Paul Reid said that “some” vaccinations will take place on Tuesday.

Speaking on RTE’s This Week programme, he said: “My expectation is we will get some vaccinations done on the 29th which would be on the Tuesday.

Mr Reid said the plan was to start vaccinating people in nursing homes across the country over an initial three week period before giving them a second dose over the following three weeks.

Paul Reid, Chief Executive Officer, HSE (Collins Photo Agency)

Priority groups in the healthcare system are also first in line for the jab before they move on to the wider population.

He said: “We are dealing with an elderly population, we want to do this right, we want to build confidence and we want to ensure a very strong take up of the vaccine.

“Safety is our primary driver and we will be rolling it out at pace but we will be doing it safely.”

Asked why the vaccine was not being administered over the weekend, Mr Reid said there was a “complex consent process” with regard to the elderly and vulnerable.

“Nobody wants to get this going quicker than myself and the HSE.”

Pictures show first doses of Covid-19 vaccine arrive in Ireland (Paul Reid Twitter)

Giving further details on the rollout plan, Mr Reid said that training schedule was in place focusing on “community vaccinators who will be mobilising into the nursing homes”.

He added there are currently around 180 community vaccinators who will give the jab in nursing homes and around 1,500 vaccinators throughout Irish hospitals.

“There’s an updated training that has to be deployed. This is not just a simple a process like any other injection. There are safety protocols that have to go with it. Then we will be rolling out to other elements of the workforce including GPs and pharmacies.”

The news of the vaccine rollout comes as Ireland saw its highest number of Covid-19 cases since the pandemic began over the weekend.

Speaking on the rise in cases Reid urged people to limit their contacts over the next couple of weeks.

He said: "They are very concerning numbers that we have seen over the past week, particularly in the last three to four days.

“What we’re also seeing in the community is a high positivity level.

“Equally concerning is the numbers of contacts that people have we’re seeing it move from an average of 2.5 to 3 to over five at the moment.

He added that testing and tracing volumes were now at “alarming levels” saying highest daily tests were now at 23,000.

“My call to the public particularly as we head into the New Year is to really take the right appropriate actions to reduce contacts that you will have in the next few days because the virus is transmitting at a very concerning level.”

“The public can help the system not to become overwhelmed by reducing their contacts. We are calling on people to play their part in reducing transmission.”

A phial of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine (Getty Images)

Mr Reid said “we did predict there would be more people meeting over Christmas ... people have had a really tough year” admitting he knows it is “hard” for the public to hear him asking them to reduce their contacts during the festive period.

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