SINGAPORE – Singapore on Friday (10 April) confirmed 198 more coronavirus cases and three new clusters, bringing the total number of infections to 2,108.

In a press statement, the Ministry of Health (MOH) said that these clusters are a dormitory at 31 Sungei Kadut Avenue, the ICA Building (10 Kallang Road) and a renovation site at the National University Hospital (5 Lower Kent Ridge Road).

Of the 198 new cases, 79 cases are linked to clusters at foreign worker dormitories and 48 are linked to non-dormitory clusters or other cases.

Some 71 cases are currently unlinked, pending contact tracing.

There are no imported cases.

Table of COVID-19 cases on 10 April 2020. (TABLE: MOH) More

Updates on clusters

Four of the earlier confirmed cases (Cases 1731, 1735, 1830 and 1831) have now been linked to a new cluster at a dormitory at 31 Sungei Kadut Avenue.

One of the newly confirmed cases (Case 1950) is linked to four previous cases (Cases 1553, 1650, 1698 and 1733), forming a new cluster at the ICA Building (10 Kallang Road).

Five of the newly confirmed cases (Cases 1913, 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2053) are linked to nine previous cases (Cases 1146, 1478, 1563, 1665, 1724, 1725, 1834, 1837 and 1838), forming a new cluster at a renovation site at the National University Hospital (5 Lower Kent Ridge Road).

An additional 24 cases are linked to the cluster at S11 Dormitory @ Punggol (2 Seletar North Link), which has a total of 306 confirmed cases. It is Singapore’s largest COVID-19 cluster to date.

Some 20 more cases are linked to the cluster at Westlite Toh Guan dormitory (18 Toh Guan Road East), which has a total of 69 confirmed cases now.

Nine additional cases are linked to the cluster at Toh Guan Dormitory (19A Toh Guan Road East), which has a total of 34 confirmed cases now.

A total of 12 additional cases are linked to the cluster at Sungei Tengah Lodge (500 Old Choa Chu Kang Road), which has a total of 55 confirmed cases now.

Eleven more cases are linked to the cluster at Tampines Dormitory (2 Tampines Place), which has a total of 49 cases now.

Five additional cases are linked to the cluster at Cochrane Lodge I (51 Admiralty Road West), which has a total of 15 cases now.

Two additional cases are linked to the cluster at Cochrane Lodge II (49 Admiralty Road West), which has a total of seven cases now (Cases 956, 967, 1104, 1240, 1349, 1640 and 2093).

One additional case is linked to the cluster at a dormitory at 55 Sungei Kadut Loop, which has a total of seven cases now (Cases 868, 972, 974, 1356, 1510, 1549 and 2085).

One more case is linked to the cluster at Shaw Lodge (12 Shaw Road), which has a total of six confirmed cases now (Cases 1379, 1380, 1556, 1558, 1564 and 1926).

Four additional cases are linked to the cluster at a construction site at Project Glory (50 Market Street), which has a total of 41 confirmed cases now.

Eight additional cases are linked to the cluster at Mustafa Centre (145 Syed Alwi Road), which has a total of 65 confirmed cases now.

Four additional cases are linked to the cluster at Keppel Shipyard (51 Pioneer Sector 1), which has a total of 21 cases now.

Two additional cases are linked to the cluster at Dover Court International School (301 Dover Road), which has a total of 11 confirmed cases now.

One additional case is linked to the cluster at The Wedding Brocade (1 Yishun Industrial Street 1), which has a total of four cases now.

Contact tracing is underway for unlinked cases to establish any links to previous cases or travel history to affected countries or regions.

Seventh death from COVID-19 complications

Singapore has recorded a seventh death due to COVID-19.

Case 987, an 86-year-old female Singaporean, died from complications due to COVID-19 infection on Thursday night. She is linked to the cluster at the Lee Ah Mooi Old Age Home.

She was admitted to NCID on 1 April, and was confirmed to have COVID-19 infection on the same day. NCID has reached out to her family and is extending assistance to them.

Cases from the public healthcare sector

Cases 1842 and 1962

They are both 26-year-old female Singaporeans who have no recent travel history to affected countries or regions, and are close contacts. Both cases are doctors at Tan Tock Seng Hospital.