NSW records 294 new local Covid-19 infections and four deaths
NSW has recorded 294 new Covid cases and four more deaths on Monday as infection numbers continue to remain stable.
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NSW has recorded 294 new locally acquired Covid-19 cases and four more deaths on Monday.
NSW Health announced the new infections on Twitter at 9am and said 474 coronavirus patients were in hospital, with 116 of those in intensive care and 57 people on a ventilator.
The new cases were from the Hunter New England Local Health District (59), South Western Sydney (54), Murrumbidgee (46), Mid North Coast (30), Western Sydney (24), and South Eastern Sydney (18).
NSW has now reached 84.8 per cent of the population aged 16 and older fully vaccinated against Covid-19, while more than 93 per cent have had at least one dose.
NSW COVID-19 update â Monday 25 October 2021
— NSW Health (@NSWHealth) October 24, 2021
In the 24-hour reporting period to 8pm last night:
- 93% of people aged 16+ have had one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine
- 84.8% of people aged 16+ have had two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine
- 59,612 tests pic.twitter.com/QyhwwjOrAi
The health department also confirmed no new cases were recorded in hotel quarantine on Monday.
The new deaths included a person in their 40s, two people in their 60s and one person in their 70s.
“The person in their 40s was not vaccinated, the two people in their 60s had received one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, and the person in their 70s had received two doses of a Covid-19 vaccine. All four people had underlying health conditions,” NSW Health said in a statement.
It takes the death toll of the outbreak since June 16 this year to 502, and 558 in total since the start of the pandemic.
Covid infections in NSW continue to remain steady as the state emerges from the deadly Delta outbreak and the population enjoys greater freedoms.
As the state continues to open up, Premier Dominic Perrottet launched a new tourism campaign that he said would accelerate the recovery of the NSW visitor economy following years of hardship through drought, bushfires, floods and the pandemic.
“For those of us who are lucky enough to live here, NSW sells itself, but for people wanting to come here for a first or return visit this campaign will be impossible to resist,” he said.
Originally published as NSW records 294 new local Covid-19 infections and four deaths