As of Friday noon (23 July), the Ministry of Health (MOH) has preliminarily confirmed an additional 133 cases of COVID-19 infection in Singapore.
This brings the total number of infection cases to 63,924.
There are 130 new cases of locally transmitted COVID-19 infection, of which 78 are linked to the Jurong Fishery Port cluster and six belong to the KTV cluster.
Of the 130 cases today, 64 are linked to previous cases and have already been placed on quarantine. 37 are linked to previous cases and were detected through surveillance.
29 are currently unlinked.
“Amongst the cases are 2 seniors above 70 years who are unvaccinated or partially vaccinated, and are at risk of serious illness,” said MOH.
In addition, there are three imported cases, who had been placed on Stay-Home Notice (SHN) or isolated upon arrival in Singapore. One was detected upon arrival in Singapore, while two developed the illness during SHN or isolation.
The Ministry will share further updates in its press release tonight.
Condition of confirmed cases & progress of national vaccination programme
According to last night’s press release, 415 cases are currently warded in hospital. Most are well and under observation.
There are currently seven cases of serious illness requiring oxygen supplementation, and one in critical condition in the intensive care unit (ICU). None amongst these eight cases is fully vaccinated.
“As of 21 July 2021, we have administered a total of 6,911,740 doses of COVID-19 vaccines under the national vaccination programme,” said MOH.
“The total number of doses administered was 6,911,740, covering 4,184,559 individuals. 2,847,397 individuals have completed the full vaccination regimen, consisting of 120,216 recovered persons who received at least one dose and 2,727,181 who received their second dose.
“In addition, 74,052 doses of Sinovac vaccines were administered as of 21 Jul 2021, covering 64,982 individuals.”
MOH to stop providing details of COVID-19 community cases
As Singapore moves towards a new phase of battling the pandemic, the MOH said in a statement on 29 June that it will no longer disclose details of each new COVID-19 case detected in the community.
“Besides daily numbers, we will include information on the key trends of the local situation, clusters we are monitoring, progress of vaccination and the number of people who suffered a severe form of the disease,” said the Ministry.
According to the MOH, this decision was made by the COVID-19 multi-ministry task force, with a “strong focus on preventing the virus from spreading, vaccinating our population and starting the process to transit to a new normal”.