Coronavirus & Slovenia, Sun 25/10: 1,675 New Cases, 29% Positivity Rate; Non-Essential Medical Services Suspended

By , 25 Oct 2020, 13:29 PM Lifestyle
Coronavirus & Slovenia, Sun 25/10: 1,675 New Cases, 29% Positivity Rate; Non-Essential Medical Services Suspended covid-19.sledilnik.org/

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STA, 25 October 2020 - Slovenia saw 1,675 new coronavirus cases for Saturday as a record 29% of all tests returned positive results. Hospitalisations exceeded 500 and another five patients with Covid-19 died, fresh government data show.

The daily tally is just 286 below Friday's absolute record of 1,961, but on fewer tests performed, at 5,776, compared to 7,025 on Friday as the positivity rate climbed further.

The country's total case count has now neared 23,000, at 22,952, as the number of active cases increased to 14,288, data from tracker site covid-19.sledilnik.org show.

The death toll has risen to 241, after the government reported on six deaths for Saturday, up from five initially reported by the Health Ministry.

The rolling 14-day average of cases per 100,000 residents has increased to 682.

With another 89 admissions, Covid-19 hospitalisations rose to 508, despite 23 patients discharged home. The number of those requiring intensive care rose by eight to 71.

As hospitals are becoming stretched with Covid-19 patients, most non-urgent medical services were suspended today under a decree issued by the Health Health Minister Tomaž Gantar the night before.

UKC Ljubljana, the country's largest medical centre, already suspended most non-essential services on Friday, while it is expanding Covid-19 units and beds.

UKC Ljubljana director general Janez Poklukar has announced an expansion to the Peter Držaj Hospital in the Šiška borough as the fourth location for Covid-19 patients after the departments of the infectious diseases, orthopaedics and a former paediatric hospital.

As on Sunday, UKC Ljubljana is treating 121 patients with Covid-19, of them 25 in intensive care,
infectiologist Mateja Logar said.

Considering the growth in infections reflects the situation ten days ago, Logar could not say yet how effective the latest restrictions will be. "Let's hope the situation will stabilise, bottom up next week," she said.

"Our estimate is that one in 50 residents is positive, so the likelihood of us getting infected is greater," Logar said, urging on everyone to abide by preventive measures and not to meet the extended family or socialise outside their family bubble, even while visiting graves for All Saint's Day.

The Covid-19 tracker site shows that most of the latest cases, 227, were recorded in Ljubljana, followed by 91 in Kranj in the north-west, and 51 in Domžale, just to the north of Ljubljana.

Ljubljana now has 1,919 active infections for a per capita infection rate of 0.65%; Kranj has 717 active cases or 1.26% of its residents infected and Domžale has 543 active infections (1.48%). The infection rates in some of the smaller municipalities are higher.

Non-essential medical services suspended

STA, 25 October 2020 - Most non-essential medical services will be temporarily unavailable as of Sunday under a decree issued by the Health Minister Tomaž Gantar late on Saturday that focuses health resources on the battle against Covid-19.

While some hospitals, including UKC Ljubljana, the largest hospital complex in the country, have started suspending non-essential services in recent days, this decree now applies to health providers nation-wide.

It stipulates that all services except oncology, services for pregnant women and newborns, vaccination and work medicine are suspended as of today.

This includes all preventive services with the exception of cancer screening programmes, prevention for pregnant women, new mothers and newborns, preventive checks for children under a year old, preventive services concerning occupational medicine, and services whose suspension would have a direct negative impact on a patient's health.

Hospitals will adjust the number of specialist examinations and suspend all but the most urgent surgeries.

The decree stipulates that health providers at the primary level must provide sufficient capacity for the treatment of Covid-19 patients. If they cannot do that alone, they may join forces with other providers.

In a second decree, the minister determined that medical interns and speciality trainees must be included in the provision of services necessary to battle the Covid-19 epidemic.

Both decrees enter into force today and the minister will check every 14 days whether the measures are still needed.

Slovenia recorded nearly 2,000 new coronavirus cases on Friday, the last day for which data are currently available. There were 449 Covid-19 patients in hospital yesterday, including 63 in intensive care, according to data tracker Covid-19 Sledilnik.

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