Sursa foto: Inquam Photos / George Calin
The national Committee for vaccination against COVID (CNCAV) informs that in the last 24 hours 23,470 people were immunized, of which 9,793 with the first Pfizer BioNTech vaccine and 13,677 with the booster shot.
According to the data put at the disposal by the CNCAV by the National Institute of Public Health, through the application of the Electronic Registry of National Vaccination (RENV), since December 27, when the immunization began in Romania, 772,202 shots were delivered, to a number of 620,176 people, of which: 468,150 people vaccinated with one dose and 152,026 people vaccinated with two doses.
In the last 24 hours there were 74 minor and common adverse reactions, of which 8 local reactions and 66 general reactions.
“The Slovenian Government had already adopted a roadmap to ease or tighten measures at the beginning of December, given that we were already in the second wave of infections, and this plan was revised at the beginning of January according to the situation that developed. Prime minister Janez Janša |
Author Kabinet predsednika vlade
This plan is well-known and has been presented many times, and all the measures that the Government adopts have been foreseen in advance. Even the markers to relax measures by individual statistical region were made public during this period, and new data was entered on an ongoing basis. There are practically no unknowns regarding the regional situations,” said the Prime Minister. He stated that public dilemmas have often arisen regarding the general requirements at the national level that have to be met in order to even begin to relax measures at the regional level. “Most recently such concern has arisen in connection with the Koro
By Reuters Staff
1 Min Read
PRAGUE, Jan 18 (Reuters) - The Czech Republic has confirmed the detection of the new, more transmissible variant of coronavirus first found in Britain, news agency CTK quoted the National Institute of Public Health as saying on Monday.
A spokeswoman for the institute was not immediately available for comment. (Reporting by Jan Lopatka; editing by David Evans)
A press conference on the current situation regarding the COVID-19 virus was held by state secretary at the Ministry of Health Marija Magajne and Director of the National Institute of Public Health Milan Krek.
Slovenia Times
2. February, 2021
Ljubljana – After protests calling against closure of schools in black-tiered regions were held in a number of towns this weekend, calls for reopening of schools from a several stakeholders continued on Monday.
The Headteachers’ Association president Gregor Pečan intends to urge the government to reopen schools in the entire country if coronavirus testing among teachers conducted today shows no significant increase since a week ago.
In case of breakouts, the situation should be addressed locally, with individual classes going into isolation and switching to distance learning, he said.
Until 5pm today, 16,590 tests were conducted among teachers who teach in person with 229 coming back positive for a positivity rate of 1.4% – the same share as a week ago when 17,435 test were performed until 5pm and 244 returned positive, the Health Ministry told the STA.