Covid By County

at

COVID-19 cases according to county

Meanwhile…

COVID -19 cases according to Dublin postcode

Ken Foxe writes:

The most detailed geographic breakdown of cases in Dublin that has been made available so far by health authorities.

In the breakdown of #COVID19 cases by Dublin postal district. Dublin 15 and Dublin 24 account for around one in six cases. Up until now, this level of detail has not been made available for the county…

Data is provided by postcode via HSE and published by Right To Known the public interest…

Right To Know

*Some patient addresses reflect the location of their residential care facility.
**This total does not include cases who had an address outside of Ireland and those who had an incomplete address recorded.

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7 thoughts on “Covid By County

  1. jonsmoke

    What is the point of this? More people live in Dublin than other areas so there are more cases there. More people live in Dublin 15 than other areas so there are more cases there, etc., etc..

    1. Hank

      More skangers live in Dublin 24 so it’s skewing our southside figures. I demand that Tallaght be immediately moved to the northside..

  2. jamesjoist

    Aren’t statistics mad yokes , if you take it per head of population per County you might get a different argument.

  3. MaryLou's ArmaLite

    How did Galway have so few cases when compared to far less populated counties like Mayo, Donegal, Monaghan, Cavan and Tipperary?

    1. jamesjoist

      Who knows , that is type of thing which keeps those charged with track ing and tracing up late at night .

    2. realPolithicks

      I’m guessing it’s some kind of plot by Mary Lou and those damn shinners wha!

  4. f_lawless

    I presume the figures are limited to cases where the symptoms were deemed severe enough to get tested? I imagine the actual number of cases would be much higher considering that, for the majority of people, symptoms are relatively milder to even non-existent. There is also a strong possibility that the virus had arrived and was spreading undetected several weeks before any testing began

Comments are closed.

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