Recall Stormont amid omicron wave - Sinn Fein
Over 30k cases were detected in the four days over the New Year break.
Sinn Fein MLAs are calling for the recall of the Stormont Assembly as Northern Ireland grapples with the latest wave of the coronavirus pandemic.
Pat Sheehan has submitted a recall motion to the Assembly to see MLAs return early to discuss the reopening of schools and other issues.
Health Committee chairman Colm Gildernew said he has also asked if that committee can be recalled to hear from minister Robin Swann.
Earlier this week, the region's chief scientific adviser Professor Ian Young said it is likely that as many as one in ten people in some areas have or had Covid-19 over the festive period.
The latest figures from the Department of Health, published on Tuesday, revealed a further 15 deaths of patients who had previously tested positive and another 30,423 cases.
Prof Young said he expects the peak of the Omicron wave to happen in the coming weeks in terms of cases and mid-late January in terms of the impact on hospitals.
Teachers' unions have warned the return of children to the classroom will lead to a further increase in transmission and that members had concerns about contact tracing as well as staffing levels.
Meanwhile, the chair of Community Pharmacy NI has said demand for lateral flow tests is outstripping supply.
The tests can be ordered online from government or picked up in some pharmacies.
Peter Rice said each pharmacy only gets one box of lateral flow tests per day, which in some cases can be used up within an hour of receiving it.
"The Omicron variant has led to a significant increase in cases and also a significant change in how the testing is required, so instead of PCRs people now want LFTs and that has really ramped up the demand and meant that we just can't get the tests quickly enough to satisfy what the customers want," he said.
"The supply is dealt with through one of our wholesalers that go to pharmacies daily but they're obviously having to focus on the supply of medicine first and foremost, and it means that each pharmacy only gets one box of lateral flow tests per day, and in some cases that box is used up within the first hour or so of receiving it.
"We have been liaising with the Department of Health hopefully to increase the supply but, at the minute, it's just a matter of being patient, if the public can realise that pharmacies are under significant pressure."