37,192 new infections in Austria – NEW Vorarlberger daily newspaper
37,192 new infections have been registered in the past 24 hours according to the figures from the Ministry of the Interior and Health (as of Sunday, 9.30 a.m.). This is only slightly lower than last Sunday’s figure of 38,060 new infections. In the past seven days, an average of 44,611 people per day have been infected with Sars-CoV-2. Death was per 100,000 inhabitants Seven-day incidence at 3477.5a slight decrease from Saturday.
In the past 24 hours are 22 people in Austria on or with Covid-19 died. That was below the seven-day average of 28.9 deaths per day. In the past seven days, 202 deaths related to Corona were registered, so the pandemic has claimed 15,409 lives in Austria since it broke out. So far there have been 171 corona deaths per 100,000 inhabitants.
On Sunday there was in Austria 447,691 active cases, down slightly from Saturday’s 2108. 3,466,203 cases of the coronavirus have been confirmed since the pandemic began. Since the outbreak of the pandemic, 3,003,103 people have recovered, with 39,428 patients reported recovered in the last 24 hours.
The number of hospital patients with a Covid-19 disease fell slightly to below 3000 on Sunday. So they were in the hospital 2992 people, down 39 less than yesterday. Of them, 200 people were concentrated in intensive care units, down three from Saturday but up 13 in a week.
The State with the highest seven-day incidence War die on Sunday Styria with 3990, followed by Upper Austria, Lower Austria and Vorarlberg with 3838.6, 3823.9 and 3547.2 cases per 100,000 inhabitants. Salzburg had a seven-day incidence of 3434.8, Burgenland 3357.9 and Vienna 3118.7. Just Carinthia (2908.5) and Tirol (2524.6) were under 3000.
Only 2522 vaccinations were carried out on Saturday, of which 162 first stitches, 444 second engravings and 1916 third engravings. According to e-vaccination card data, 6,811,126 people have received at least one vaccination. 6,224,720 people or 69.3 percent of Austrians have an available vaccination.