K. Male'
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28 Dec 2021 | Tue 09:46
Samples being collected for Covid-19 testing
Samples being collected for Covid-19 testing
RaajjeMV
Covid-19 community transmission
Maldives Covid-19 case tally surpasses 95,000 with over 100 new infections
Hospital admissions have dropped to eight
Maldives currently has 2,079 active cases
Maldives Covid-19 case count is at 95,032, with recoveries having risen to 92,679
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Maldives Covid-19 case tally has surpassed 95,000 with over 100 new infections confirmed on Monday.

Monday is the eighth consecutive day Maldives has been reporting over 100 coronavirus cases, according to the latest figures publicized by the Health Protection Agency (HPA).

168 new infections and 121 additional recoveries were reported between 6pm Sunday and 6pm Monday.

With this development, active Covid-19 cases across the Maldives have risen to 2,079 from the previous day’s 2,032.

4,223 samples were tested for the virus in the reporting period, of which 44 returned positive from the congested capital, Greater Malé Region, 73 from residential islands outside the capital, 50 from operational resorts and one from a liveaboard vessel.

This means that Maldives Covid-19 case tally currently sits at 95,032, with recoveries having risen to 92,679.

By sundown on Monday, two Covid-19 patients were released from the hospital with which hospital admissions have dropped to eight.

Maldives reported its first Covid-19 fatality in April 2020 and since then, the death toll has risen to 261. The latest victim was identified as a 66-year-old Maldivian man. He succumbed to complications of the virus while receiving treatment at Gaaf Dhaal Covid Management Facility. 11 Covid-19 fatalities have been reported so far in December.

Maldives confirmed the first case of the new, more transmissible variant of Covid-19, ‘Omicron’ on December 5.

HPA highlighted that the first case of the new variant was confirmed through genome sequencing of a tourist that arrived in the Maldives from South Africa on November 21. Since then, the public health authority has revealed that more cases have been detected.

The public health authority urged caution over the confirmation of ‘Omicron’ in the Maldives, pushing the public to take the necessary precautions for their safety and for the safety of others and to pay special heed to the instructions and guidelines set forth by the authorities.

HPA stressed on the importance of adhering to safety measures to avoid another Covid-19 wave from hitting the Maldives and urged the public to provide their full support and cooperation in helping authorities curb the spread of the infection.

The public health authorities have urged the public to get their vaccination doses, adhere to guidelines set place in hosting events and gatherings and even in the work environment to prevent the risk of widespread infection.

This comes at a time the government imposed a ban on travel from seven countries in Africa recently, triggered by the threats ‘Omicron’. Travelers have been banned from South Africa, Namibia, Mozambique, Lesotho, Botswana, Zimbabwe and Eswatini, including those who visited these countries 14 days before arriving into the Maldives, as well as those who transited in these countries for more than 12 hours.

Further, the announcement reads that those who have travelled to the Maldives after spending more than 14 days in these countries and over 12 hours in transit, must observe a quarantine period of 14 days.

These new measures have been implemented at a time President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih has also revealed that there have been surging concerns regarding the more transmissible ‘Omicron’ SARS-CoV-2 variant.

Research indicates that those who have recovered from Covid-19 are at a high risk of contracting the new variant, dubbed a “variant of concern” by the World Health Organization (WHO).

The country has been in a state of public health emergency for over a year, since 12 March 2020. It was extended a 21st time to expire on December 30.

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