Fiji’s main island of Viti Levu has been issued with new curfew hours amid the worsening Covid-19 crisis in the country.
As of yesterday, the new curfew hours are from 6pm to 4am.
That compares to 626 cases and nine deaths in the previous 24-hour period.
Health Secretary Doctor James Fong said last night 202 cases were from the Western Division, while 1083 cases were from the Central Division
He all, but two of the victims, were unvaccinated.
* An 82-year-old woman from Tamavua in the capital Suva died at home on on 23 July.
* A 57-year-old man from Nadawa in Nasinu died at home on 24 July.
* A 34-year-old man from Nadera, Nasinu, presented to the Colonial War Memorial Hospital in severe respiratory distress on 26 July. His condition worsened in the hospital and he died two days later.
* A 52-year-old man from Raiwasa, Suva, presented to the CWM Hospital in severe respiratory distress 10 July. His condition worsened at the hospital and he died 15 days later on 25 July.
* A 45-year-old woman from Samabula, Suva, presented to the CWM Hospital in severe respiratory distress 16 July. Her condition worsened at the hospital and she died seven days later.
* A 73-year-old woman from Naitasiri presented to a health facility in severe respiratory distress on 23 July. But her condition worsened at the health centre and she died on the same day. Her family reported that she had a cough, generalised weakness and shortness of breath for one week prior to visiting the health facility.
* A 72-year-old man from Naitasiri died at home on 25 July.
* An 89-year-old woman from Narere, Nasinu, presented to the CWM Hospital emergency department in severe respiratory distress on 26 July. Her condition worsened in the hospital and she died hours later.
* A 74-year-old man from Tacirua died at home on 25 July.
“There have now been 195 deaths due to Covid-19 in Fiji, with 193 of these deaths during the outbreak that started in April this year. The seven-day rolling average of deaths per day is eight.
“We also have recorded 101 positive patients who died from the serious medical conditions that they had before they contracted Covid-19; these are not classified as Covid deaths.”
Dr Fong said 263 people had recovered since the last update, which means there have been 17,937 infections with 16,239 of the cases in the Central Division and 1698 in the West.
“All cases that were recorded in the Northern and Eastern Divisions (cases that were imported from Viti Levu) have recovered and there are no active cases currently in those divisions.
“There have been 24,354 cases during the outbreak that started in April 2021. We have recorded a total of 24,424 cases in Fiji since the first case was reported in March 2020, with 6191 recoveries.
“A total of 890 individuals were screened and 411 swabbed at our stationary screening clinics in the last 24 hours, bringing our cumulative total to 358,925 individuals screened and 66,439 swabbed to date.”
Dr Fong said as of the 24 July this year, 2575 individuals were screened and 302 swabbed, with a total of 741,611 individuals screened and 65,752 swabbed.
He said a total of 253,945 samples had been tested since this outbreak started in April 2021, with 296,806 tested since March 2020.
“There were 3095 tests reported for 24 July. The national 7-day daily test average is 3530 tests per day or 4.0 tests per 1000 population. The national 7-day average daily test positivity is 22.8 percent.”
The World Health Organisation threshold is at five percent.
“This means that 75.2 percent of the target population have received at least one dose and 16.6 percent are now fully vaccinated nation-wide.
“Fijians can check the Ministry’s vaccine dashboard to find real-time data on first-dose and second-dose numbers at the national, divisional and sub-divisional levels.
“The 7-day average of new cases per day is 875 cases per day or 989 cases per million population per day. The daily case number increased today after a drop below the average in recent days, with most cases still being reported from the Central Division.
“Increasing numbers of daily cases are also being reported from the West. Day to day changes in case numbers are expected, and a few days of decreased case numbers should not be misinterpreted as an overall decline in cases in the community.”
Dr Fong said this was the reason the ministry relied heavily on a 7-day average of cases to monitor the progress of the outbreak.
With testing remaining high, test positivity high and increasing cases being reported in the west, Dr Fong said the ministry expected average daily case numbers to remain at a high level and possibly increase.
The daily average of deaths is also being monitored and continues to increase, he said.
Fiji now has over 18,000 active cases in isolation and 195 deaths, with 193 of them from this latest outbreak that began in April.