9,900 quarantined in a week as coronavirus infections on rise
Published : 12 Aug 2021, 13:15
Updated : 12 Aug 2021, 13:55
The number of new COVID-19 cases has increased slightly in the country this week compared to the previous week, said the Ministry of Social Affairs and Health and the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare (THL) in a joint press release on Thursday.
The total number of new cases reported between 2 and 8 August was 5,017, whereas a week before the number of new cases was 4,618.
Currently, the COVID-19 epidemic is spreading especially among unvaccinated young adults.
Out of the administered 133,000 COVID-19 tests, the share of positive samples was 3.8 per cent. The incidence of new COVID-19 cases in the last two-week period (26 July–8 August) was 174 per 100,000 inhabitants, and the effective basic reproduction number is currently 1.35–1.40, with a 90 per cent probability. Last week, the share of infections from abroad was around 8 per cent.
Between 2 and 8 August, a record number of 9,880 people were quarantined, which is over 1,500 people more than in the preceding week.
A total of 23 per cent of the new cases were reported among people already in quarantine. This is about the same as between 19 and 25 July and between 26 July and 1 August. It is possible that the high number of people placed in quarantine will be reflected as an increase in the number of new cases next week.
The burden on primary healthcare remains high. Some regions have reported backlogs in contact tracing and delays in placing people in isolation and quarantine.
There is also a lot of regional variation in how well contacts are traced. The source of infection was traced successfully in 54 per cent of all new cases in Finland. The backlogs reflect the increase in the number of infections and a shortage of personnel available for tracing. It is not always possible to receive all necessary information from infected and exposed persons about other potentially exposed persons.
In Finland, around 68 per cent of the population have received at least their first vaccine dose and 39 per cent of the population have received a full COVID-19 vaccine course, i.e. they have received the second vaccine dose. Among those in need of hospital care in Finland, the number of young adults and unvaccinated patients is currently notable. The overall burden on specialised healthcare has reduced slightly, but the need for intensive care has increased compared to the situation a week before.
Based on the information provided by the hospital districts, a total of 83 people were receiving hospital care due to the COVID-19 disease on 11 August 2021. Of them, 14 were inpatients in primary healthcare, 50 inpatients in specialised healthcare and 19 inpatients in intensive care.
A full vaccine course, i.e. two vaccine doses, provides good protection against COVID-19 and its more serious forms as well as COVID-19 variants.
On 11 August 2021, the total number of COVID-19-related deaths since the start of the epidemic was 995.