Irish Daily Mail

NO NEW COVID DEATHS

Taoiseach hails ‘day of hope’ but two-metre rule remains

- By Áine McMahon and Cate McCurry news@dailymail.ie

IRELAND has recorded no new Covid-19 deaths for the first time since March.

Taoiseach Leo Varadkar hailed the news as a ‘day of hope’, calling it a ‘significan­t milestone’.

The number of cases identified continues to remain in the double digits, with 59 more cases of Covid-19 confirmed last night, bringing the total to date to 24,698.

The total number of Covid-19 related deaths in Ireland remains at 1,606.

The last day when no death was reported in Ireland was on March 21.

Acknowledg­ing the progress, Mr Varadkar tweeted: ‘Significan­t milestone today. First day with no reported Covid-19 deaths since March 21. This is a day of hope. We will prevail.’

Chief Medical Officer Dr Tony Holohan said the number of new cases and reported deaths over the past week ‘indicates that we have suppressed Covid-19 as a country’.

He added: ‘It has taken strict measures to achieve this. It will take another week to see any effect on disease incidence that might arise from the easing of measures in Phase 1.’

The State is entering the second week in easing its lockdown laws which saw the reopening of a number of retail stores and some sporting activities.

There have been calls from restaurant owners and hairdresse­rs for the two-metre rule to be relaxed so they can reopen more quickl but Dr Holohan cautioned against changing the current social distancing measure from two metres to one.

He said: ‘With that particular measure, it is simply a case that the risk of two metres is less than a distance of one metre. It is important to understand that on its own and I have talked about this with regard to face coverings... it is not a magic thing on its own.

‘A measure of two metres does not mean everything is safe outside of two metres and everything less than two metres is less safe, it is a risk.

‘We think for the moment, two metres is a reasonable compromise given where we are but everything is kept under review and I understand the difficulty that businesses find themselves in.’

The Minister for Health said it will become clear later this week whether the easing of restrictio­ns has led to more cases of Covid-19 in Ireland.

Simon Harris said he is feeling ‘optimistic’. However, he warned the public cannot ‘get sloppy’ and urged people to continue following public health advice. He also told the 2fm the advice around maintainin­g a two-metre physical distance is also under review.

A senior civil servant told yesterday’s Government Covid-19 briefing that there is ‘a lot of discussion and speculatio­n’ about whether some of the public health advice and the roadmap schedule of reopening will change.

Liz Canavan said the current advice from the National Public Health Emergency Team and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control is that people should physically distance by two metres.

She said: ‘That remains the public health advice from the Government... Any changes to the current restrictiv­e social distancing measure must be slow and incrementa­l... Going too far too fast could result in a sudden surge in infections.’

‘Going too fast could see surge’

 ??  ?? ‘It has been suppressed’: Chief Medical Officer Dr Tony Holohan was upbeat yesterday on our progress
‘It has been suppressed’: Chief Medical Officer Dr Tony Holohan was upbeat yesterday on our progress

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