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Chris Fearne’s breaking health conference: everything you missed

Jan 6 2021 Share

In a breaking health conference addressed by Chris Fearne earlier today, the Deputy Prime Minister and Health Minister addressed a number of issues with regards to the COVID-19 situation in Malta.

Primarily, Dr. Fearne notified the public with regards to the European Union’s imminent approval of the Moderna vaccine, which Malta would be receiving along with the other member states – a vaccine which requires a 4-week window between doses.

He went on to address that Malta will have administered vaccines to all front-liners, vulnerable and residents of institutions whilst the country as a whole should achieve herd immunity by the end of summer.

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COVID-19 cases surpass 200 for first time since November as daily cases reach all-time high

Jan 6 2021 Share

Today’s daily case report brought quite a shock to the system as Malta has registered its highest-ever number of daily COVID-19 cases with 224 cases.

This is the first time Malta has surpassed 200 cases since November 2020, where the saħħa page had reported 218 cases overnight on the 2nd of November.

As cases surge around the world with countries in Europe announcing lockdowns, what does the future hold for Malta? Deputy Prime Minister and Health Minister Chris Fearne is set to address the public later today.

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224 COVID-19 cases registered overnight with 80 recoveries

62 COVID-19 cases registered overnight with 114 recoveries
Jan 6 2021 Share

Malta has registered 224 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours from 3,365 swab tests, while 80 patients have recovered. This information was announced by the official Facebook page of Malta’s Ministry for Health.

From yesterday’s cases; 32 cases were family members of previously known cases, 10 cases were contact of positive work colleagues, 20 cases were direct contacts with other positive cases and 12 cases were from social gatherings with other positive cases.

To date, Malta has registered 13,612 COVID-19 cases in total, of which: 11,540 have recovered, 227 died and 1,845 are still active.

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Why 2021 may not be the year

Jan 6 2021 Share

2021 is finally here and while it has been an absolute relief to rid of the disaster that was the year 2020, the new year does not necessarily bring with it solely sunshine and rainbows.

Unfortunately COVID-19 did not pull a Cinderella and fade into nothingness at the strike of midnight as countries and their economies are still crumbling under the effects of the pandemic with cases reaching all-time highs in various countries around the world. It is not the time to relax and ignore measures issued by the Health Authorities as the fate of the world rests in our hands, literally. Here are the facts.

Vaccines

Governing bodies around the world have approved, authorised and begun distribution of some form of coronavirus vaccine. The European Union had started vaccinations in late December and has only authorised the Pfizer and BioNTech vaccine but plans to approve a vaccine ‘in the coming hours’, as reported by European Council chief Charles Michel. In the UK, more than 1.3million citizens have been vaccinated so far with Israel leading in vaccination roll-outs. Israel has been vaccinating at such a quick rate that they are actually running out of vaccines, as reported by The Washington Post. Malta seem to be performing rather well as they place rather high in a table of vaccinations per 100 people.

Lockdowns

However, that didn’t stop them from heading into lockdown as Prime Minister Netanyahu announces a state of emergency as the country enters their third national lockdown. Several countries are following suit in the early days of 2021 with COVID-19 cases in the United States and the United Kingdom reaching record-high numbers. Elsewhere, countries like Germany have extended their lockdown and tightened restrictions, with Germany itself imposing measures such as travel bans, private meeting limits and subjecting travellers from high-risk areas to double-testing with a mandatory five-day quarantine period.

Events and Cancellations

Events worldwide are once again being postponed due to an international surge in cases with governing bodies monitoring the COVID-19 situation going forward. The UK House of Commons is currently carrying out an inquiry into the viability of summer events as large-scale festivals like Glastonbury hang by a thread, following confusion and controversy regarding the cancellation of its 2021 event. Here in Malta, multiple events were cancelled or postponed with authorities anticipating an alleged ‘return to normality’ by May of this year.

Why are we saying this?

Negative as it may seem, all of this information points to one thing: WE CANNOT LET OUR GUARD DOWN. Not only is the pandemic alive but it is booming and we must do everything in our power to control the spread. That means following any measures issued by the health authorities, maintaining our distance, sanitising frequently and sticking to the protocol.

2021 could still be the year, it’s up to us.