No appetite to extend Level 5 lockdown, says Donnelly
Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly TD
The health minister has insisted there is āno appetiteā to extend Irelandās Level 5 lockdown, but stopped short of guaranteeing the restrictions will be eased on schedule.
Stephen Donnelly urged the public to ādouble downā on compliance with measures for the remainder of the six-week lockdown as he expressed concern over recent āstalledā progress in driving down infection rates.
He said scenes of people drinking on the streets in Dublin and Cork over the weekend and data indicating more traffic on the streets were evidence of people becoming āfatiguedā with the restrictions.
The Level 5 measures are due to lift on December 1.
Mr Donnelly said while the country had made great progress in driving down infection numbers in the first half of the lockdown, Covid-19 rates were starting to go in the wrong direction again.
He said infection numbers had fallen from 1,200 a day at the start of the lockdown to current rates that had seen 366 cases recorded on Tuesday.
He said Ireland had witnessed the biggest reduction in cases in Europe.
However, the minister noted that 13 of the 26 counties have had more cases in the last seven days than they had in the previous seven days.
āWe are largely on course,ā he told RTE.
āThe first three weeks were really good, the R number for last week was down to 0.6.
āSo people have made huge sacrifices, people have really got on board with Level 5. It has worked.
āWhat Iām saying and what the public health doctors are saying, over the last week it is clear that people have become fatigued. The gatherings in large groups to drink outside is one symptom of that. Weāre seeing more traffic on the roads as well.
āThere has been an easing off over the last week, so we want to see over the next two weeks weāve got to double down, because we want to open up as much as possible for December.ā
The minister added: āThere is no appetite to not exit Level 5 in two weeks.
āThere was a very clear decision made, which was Level 5 for six weeks, which is why the next two weeks matter so much.ā
Asked if the Government would approve a lifting of Level 5 restrictions no matter what on December 1, Mr Donnelly replied: āI donāt think with Covid, the Irish Government or any government anywhere can say no matter what on anything.ā
The minister noted that the National Public Health Emergency Team (Nphet) had recommended that Level 5 measures should be lifted if case numbers fell to 100 a day.
But he added: āThere is time and if we donāt hit the hundred it doesnāt mean we wonāt come out of Level 5.
āObviously the Government and Nphet will consider a wide variety of measures.ā
On Tuesday evening, chief medical officer and Nphet chair Dr Tony Holohan also stressed the need for a concerted public effort over the next fortnight.
āI am increasingly concerned that the positive trends we had seen recently have not been maintained,ā he said.
āThe five-day moving average of daily cases has increased from an average of 350 cases on November 11 to 424 today.
āWe have two weeks to continue in our efforts to drive down community transmission of this disease as much as possible.
āThe lower the incidence the more flexibility the country will have in easing measures.ā



