North records 1,066 new Covid-19 cases amid call for Republic hospitals to share capacity

ireland
North Records 1,066 New Covid-19 Cases Amid Call For Republic Hospitals To Share Capacity
Share this article

Digital Desk staff

Northern Ireland has recorded a further 1,066 new cases of coronavirus over the last 24 hours, while one further death has been reported.

The total number of cases in the region is now more than 20,000, with almost a third diagnosed in the last week. With this major surge, Northern Ireland has recorded more cases than the Republic in the last week despite its smaller population.

Sinn Féin has said hospitals in the Republic should be drawing up plans to receive patients from Northern Ireland, if the current surge of Covid-19 cases the region is experiencing continues to grow.

Advertisement

The party has said the Republic's hospitals need to be ready to take patients from the region if hospitals there come under too much pressure.

Sinn Féin’s health spokesman David Cullinane said that only an all-Ireland effort would work to stop the virus: “Well I think we’re already seeing patients being transferred from different hospitals within regions.

“If it is the case that we have to share hospital capacity across the Border, of course that should be examined. I think every option has to be on the table and I’ve seen saying that for some time.

“There is no response or no action that cannot be on the table in fighting this virus, so it has to be action on all fronts.”

Advertisement

All-island

The party has called for officials on either side of the Border to pool testing and tracing resources, in order to fight the outbreak on an all-island basis.

Yesterday was the first day in a week the North had seen fewer new cases than the Republic, as the south saw 1,012 new cases - the highest daily number of cases yet recorded in the Republic that did not include any backlog.

Mr Cullinane said more cross-Border co-operation was needed: "The health ministers north and south need to talk, but we actually need action.

“We need to see much stronger collaboration on testing and tracing, we need to see much more alignment on the response and restrictions.

“The island has to come together as one, we have to show solidarity. If it is not an all island response, we’re not going to be able to wrestle back control of this virus and stay ahead of it in the time ahead.”

Read More

Message submitting... Thank you for waiting.

Want us to email you top stories each lunch time?

Download our Apps
© BreakingNews.ie 2024, developed by Square1 and powered by PublisherPlus.com