• South Korea, a Virus Success Story, Now Finds Its Model Unsustainable

    From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Mon Feb 21 19:13:08 2022
    South Korea, a Virus Success Story, Now Finds Its Model Unsustainable
    By Choe Sang-Hun, Feb. 17, 2022, NYT

    Critics have said the government’s new approach disadvantages underprivileged classes, like poor people who lack access to
    medical care or other social services.

    “It’s tantamount to letting the virus spread, rather than doing
    everything possible to contain its spread,” said ​Woo Seoc-kyun,
    a representative of the Association of Physicians for Humanism​,
    a nationwide doctors’ group​. “It threatens to reverse what we
    have achieved so far through a tight management of the pandemic,
    like keeping the number of fatalities low.”

    The government said that even if the daily caseload soared, ​it
    would still consider lifting restrictions further so that South
    Korea could switch to a “life with Covid-19,” treating the disease
    like “seasonal flu,” provided that the number of seriously ill
    patients was kept under control.

    Whether the government can keep up with the Omicron surge well
    enough to make such a shift is still up for debate. This week,
    the United States put South Korea on its “Do Not Travel” list.
    The number of people being treated at home surged from 150,000
    last week to 314,000 on Thursday and is expected to grow.

    And so, too, could the number of seriously ill.

    Jung Jae-hun, a professor of preventive medicine at Gachon University
    in South Korea, estimated that the daily caseload would peak at over
    200,000 and stay at that level throughout March. Another estimate,
    by the government’s National Institute for Mathematical Sciences,
    predicted as many as 360,000 new patients a day by early next month.

    The authorities are preparing more hospital beds for the seriously
    ill as a precaution. They are also asking neighborhood clinics to
    pitch in to treat at-home patients remotely. Nearly half of the
    workers at government-run health clinics in Gyeonggi Province,
    which surrounds Seoul, called for an immediate relief from the
    “extreme stress” caused by a crushing workload, according to a
    recent survey.

    Last week, South Korea retired its GPS monitoring tool used to
    enforce isolation — a smartphone app that alerted health workers
    when patients left home without permission. Many of the 60,000
    workers who monitored those movements on the app will be now
    redeployed to assist vulnerable patients at home, delivering
    medicine and manning hotlines.

    “There has been a bottleneck in putting calls through, as we were
    trying to handle a sudden spike in patients,” said Lee Ki-il, a
    senior disease-control coordinator.

    The government’s ​changing attitude was not solely influenced by
    data. An increasingly impatient public​ has also become more vocal
    about the need for a new approach.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/17/world/asia/south-korea-covid-spread.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From kico@21:1/5 to David P. on Wed Mar 9 09:07:25 2022
    On 22/2/2022 11:13 am, David P. wrote:
    South Korea, a Virus Success Story, Now Finds Its Model Unsustainable
    By Choe Sang-Hun, Feb. 17, 2022, NYT

    Critics have said the government’s new approach disadvantages underprivileged classes, like poor people who lack access to
    medical care or other social services.

    “It’s tantamount to letting the virus spread, rather than doing everything possible to contain its spread,” said ​Woo Seoc-kyun,
    a representative of the Association of Physicians for Humanism​,
    a nationwide doctors’ group​. “It threatens to reverse what we
    have achieved so far through a tight management of the pandemic,
    like keeping the number of fatalities low.”

    The government said that even if the daily caseload soared, ​it
    would still consider lifting restrictions further so that South
    Korea could switch to a “life with Covid-19,” treating the disease
    like “seasonal flu,” provided that the number of seriously ill
    patients was kept under control.

    Whether the government can keep up with the Omicron surge well
    enough to make such a shift is still up for debate. This week,
    the United States put South Korea on its “Do Not Travel” list.
    The number of people being treated at home surged from 150,000
    last week to 314,000 on Thursday and is expected to grow.

    And so, too, could the number of seriously ill.

    Jung Jae-hun, a professor of preventive medicine at Gachon University
    in South Korea, estimated that the daily caseload would peak at over
    200,000 and stay at that level throughout March. Another estimate,
    by the government’s National Institute for Mathematical Sciences,
    predicted as many as 360,000 new patients a day by early next month.

    The authorities are preparing more hospital beds for the seriously
    ill as a precaution. They are also asking neighborhood clinics to
    pitch in to treat at-home patients remotely. Nearly half of the
    workers at government-run health clinics in Gyeonggi Province,
    which surrounds Seoul, called for an immediate relief from the
    “extreme stress” caused by a crushing workload, according to a
    recent survey.

    Last week, South Korea retired its GPS monitoring tool used to
    enforce isolation — a smartphone app that alerted health workers
    when patients left home without permission. Many of the 60,000
    workers who monitored those movements on the app will be now
    redeployed to assist vulnerable patients at home, delivering
    medicine and manning hotlines.

    “There has been a bottleneck in putting calls through, as we were
    trying to handle a sudden spike in patients,” said Lee Ki-il, a
    senior disease-control coordinator.

    The government’s ​changing attitude was not solely influenced by
    data. An increasingly impatient public​ has also become more vocal
    about the need for a new approach.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/17/world/asia/south-korea-covid-spread.html

    At the end of this article, it did not say what the impatient public
    has said about what new approach is needed. Surely, the public has good
    or even better ideas of putting their new approach to the government,
    too. Even so, if the majority of public has already been on feedback,
    they should have being done already.

    If the public has similar views of new approach, they should have played
    their part of doing and working together to contain the spread, too.
    Since the spread is not reduced but increased instead, it goes to show
    that the people are not working together with themselves from spreading
    to each other.

    Hence, lifting of masking is going to hurt the people more. Seriously,
    there is no need to lift the masking at all. This is because the mask is
    very much the first line of defense of the virus, instead.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to Byker on Wed Mar 9 10:42:37 2022
    On Wednesday, March 9, 2022 at 10:20:42 AM UTC-8, Byker wrote:
    "kico" wrote in message news:t08uip$od0$1...@dont-email.me...

    South Korea, a Virus Success Story, Now Finds Its Model Unsustainable
    Maybe they should trot out the "hand sanitizer kids' like their brothers on the other side of the DMZ: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mDVNGJY3HUQ

    Awesome.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Byker@21:1/5 to kico on Wed Mar 9 12:20:34 2022
    XPost: soc.culture.korean, soc.culture.taiwan, alt.war.vietnam
    XPost: alt.politics

    "kico" wrote in message news:t08uip$od0$1@dont-email.me...

    South Korea, a Virus Success Story, Now Finds Its Model Unsustainable

    Maybe they should trot out the "hand sanitizer kids' like their brothers on
    the other side of the DMZ: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mDVNGJY3HUQ

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From David P.@21:1/5 to kico on Wed Mar 9 23:19:14 2022
    kico wrote:
    David P. wrote:
    South Korea, a Virus Success Story, Now Finds Its Model Unsustainable
    By Choe Sang-Hun, Feb. 17, 2022, NYT
    [ . . . . . ] https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/17/world/asia/south-korea-covid-spread.html
    ---------------------
    Since the spread is not reduced but increased instead, it goes to show
    that the people are not working together with themselves from spreading
    to each other.

    Hence, lifting of masking is going to hurt the people more. Seriously,
    there is no need to lift the masking at all. This is because the mask is
    very much the first line of defense of the virus, instead.
    -------------------
    When everyone has to wear a mask, that PROVES we're Over-Populated!!
    The mistake was made 50 years ago when the people didn't listen to
    the scientists who called for Zero Population Growth! That's what
    brought about all the crises! If we had stayed at 4 billion, we wouldn't have climate change, the refugee crisis, decimation of wildlife, & environmental degradation! People thought they could do whatever they wanted,
    and get away with it, and they were wrong!
    --
    --

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From boro@21:1/5 to David P. on Sat Mar 12 02:03:24 2022
    On 22/2/2022 11:13 am, David P. wrote:
    South Korea, a Virus Success Story, Now Finds Its Model Unsustainable
    By Choe Sang-Hun, Feb. 17, 2022, NYT

    Critics have said the government’s new approach disadvantages underprivileged classes, like poor people who lack access to
    medical care or other social services.

    “It’s tantamount to letting the virus spread, rather than doing everything possible to contain its spread,” said ​Woo Seoc-kyun,
    a representative of the Association of Physicians for Humanism​,
    a nationwide doctors’ group​. “It threatens to reverse what we
    have achieved so far through a tight management of the pandemic,
    like keeping the number of fatalities low.”

    The government said that even if the daily caseload soared, ​it
    would still consider lifting restrictions further so that South
    Korea could switch to a “life with Covid-19,” treating the disease
    like “seasonal flu,” provided that the number of seriously ill
    patients was kept under control.

    Whether the government can keep up with the Omicron surge well
    enough to make such a shift is still up for debate. This week,
    the United States put South Korea on its “Do Not Travel” list.
    The number of people being treated at home surged from 150,000
    last week to 314,000 on Thursday and is expected to grow.

    And so, too, could the number of seriously ill.

    Jung Jae-hun, a professor of preventive medicine at Gachon University
    in South Korea, estimated that the daily caseload would peak at over
    200,000 and stay at that level throughout March. Another estimate,
    by the government’s National Institute for Mathematical Sciences,
    predicted as many as 360,000 new patients a day by early next month.

    The authorities are preparing more hospital beds for the seriously
    ill as a precaution. They are also asking neighborhood clinics to
    pitch in to treat at-home patients remotely. Nearly half of the
    workers at government-run health clinics in Gyeonggi Province,
    which surrounds Seoul, called for an immediate relief from the
    “extreme stress” caused by a crushing workload, according to a
    recent survey.

    Last week, South Korea retired its GPS monitoring tool used to
    enforce isolation — a smartphone app that alerted health workers
    when patients left home without permission. Many of the 60,000
    workers who monitored those movements on the app will be now
    redeployed to assist vulnerable patients at home, delivering
    medicine and manning hotlines.

    “There has been a bottleneck in putting calls through, as we were
    trying to handle a sudden spike in patients,” said Lee Ki-il, a
    senior disease-control coordinator.

    The government’s ​changing attitude was not solely influenced by
    data. An increasingly impatient public​ has also become more vocal
    about the need for a new approach.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/17/world/asia/south-korea-covid-spread.html


    A lot of countries are relaxing and even abandoning their control
    management and now working to even not to use mask, is going to face a
    surge in their community and country, too. Make no mistake, the surge
    will increase in these countries which practice easy going policies on
    the virus.If not careful, they will end in misery.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)