#COVID19Ireland update, 13 April:

10,647 (+992) total cases. This figure includes the results from tests outsourced to Germany.

Sadly, 31 more people diagnosed with coronavirus have died. Total deaths of those with COVID-19 to date: 365.

More graphs to follow in thread. 1/
This graph shows the growth factor for #COVID19 cases in Ireland. The weird spikes from the last couple of days should probably phase out now as the backlog of tests is cleared. 2/
This graph shows the daily percentage increase in Irish #COVID19 cases, and compares the average daily percentage increase from before our current lockdown status with the average daily increase since it started. It's around 56.5% less, or 11.7 fewer percentage points. 3/
This graph compares the curve constructed on 3 April from Gompertz growth in new #COVID19Ireland cases to actual post-3 April daily case totals (updated to reflect results from tests outsourced to Germany, but using the exact same modelling techniques and values). 4/
These graphs track the daily increases and totals of those with COVID-19 who have died in Ireland. Please be mindful of yourself and others while viewing or sharing, as they are obviously very sobering and grim (and there are real people who have died behind these numbers). 5/
I'll update the thread a bit later with this evening's release of the age-disaggregated #COVID19 data (accurate as of midnight 11 April). 6/
Here are the #COVID19Ireland hospital data as of midnight 11 April, released this evening. The 65+ group remains the most-affected and most-hospitalised grouping. Cases in the four most-affected groups have seen increases in the ~180-200 range. 7/
These graphs explore the trends in Irish #COVID19 cases for each age group. The trends of increase have been broadly consistent for the last few days. 8/
These graphs show trends in hospitalisation across the age groups (18 March to present). Some of these curves seem to be flattening slightly, but the 65+ group is bending upwards again. 9/
These graphs show the proportionate role of three #COVID19 transmission types in Ireland up to 11 April. The first graph shows only data for known types, the second includes unknowns (half of which are estimated). 'Local' here means close contact with a confirmed case. 10/
You can follow @LukePField.
Tip: mention @twtextapp on a Twitter thread with the keyword “unroll” to get a link to it.

Latest Threads Unrolled: