News Covid-19 area
The incidence rate of Covid-19 in Italy is rising rapidly: 41 cases per 100,000 people. The Rt value has also increased to 1.26. However, the occupancy rate in intensive care and medical wards remains at a low 2%. Since the Delta variant is now dominant and is very contagious, we must maintain cautious behaviour and, above all, vaccinate the two million people in their sixties who have not yet received the vaccine
Rising incidence, at 19 cases per 100,000 inhabitants, and Rt, at 0.91. The occupancy rate of medical wards and ICUs remains well below the critical threshold. However, given the high prevalence of the Delta variant, we must remain cautious and continue with vaccinations
Slight reversal of trend this week. The incidence rate has risen slightly to 11 cases per 100,000 people. The other indicators remain well below the critical threshold. The circulation of variants means we must continue the vaccination campaign at a rapid pace and remain cautious in our behaviour, including for the UEFA European Championship final
The incidence rate has fallen to 9 cases per 100,000 people and the Rt value is well below one at 0.63. The circulation of new viral variants, especially Delta at over 20% and Gamma at 12%, calls for cautious behaviour and vaccinations
The average Rt value calculated on symptomatic cases remains stable and below the epidemic threshold; achieving high vaccination coverage is essential to preventing the recurrences of pandemic episodes
The epidemiological situation in Italy continues to improve. The incidence rate continues to fall, with the Rt value around 0.68. However, the circulation of highly transmissible variants of the virus mean that we must remain cautious in our individual behaviour
The incidence rate falls to 36 cases per 100,000 people, the Rt value is down to 0.68, the bed occupancy rate in health facilities and ICUs stands at 11-12 percent. All these are positive signs, but the circulation of variants of SarsCoV-2 means that we must remain cautious in our individual behaviour