South Korea on Wednesday confirmed its first five cases of the new omicron coronavirus variant in people linked to arrivals from Nigeria, prompting the government to tighten the country’s borders.
The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency said
Wednesday the cases include a couple who arrived from Nigeria on Nov. 24 and a
friend who drove them home from the airport. The two other cases were women who
also traveled to Nigeria and returned to South Korea on Nov. 23.
Health workers earlier said they were conducting genetic
sequencing tests on a child of the couple and relatives of the man who drove
them home to determine whether they were infected.
Following the confirmation of the omicron infections, South
Korea announced it will require all passengers arriving from abroad over the
next two weeks to quarantine for at least 10 days, regardless of their
nationality or vaccination status.
The country had already banned short-term foreign travelers
arriving from eight southern African nations, including South Africa, starting
Sunday to fend off omicron, which is seen as potentially more infectious than
other versions of the virus. Officials say the same rules will now be extended
to foreigners coming from Nigeria.
The couple who arrived from Nigeria on Nov. 24 was fully
vaccinated, but their teenage child and the friend who drove them were
unvaccinated, said Choi Seung-ho, a KDCA official. Park Young-joon, another
KDCA official, said the four weren’t exhibiting serious illness aside from mild
respiratory symptoms or muscle pain.
While omicron’s emergence has triggered global alarm and
forced countries to tighten their borders, scientists say it’s not yet clear
whether the variant is more contagious or dangerous than other strains,
including the devastating delta.
The detection of South Korea’s first omicron cases came as a
delta-driven surge leaves the nation grappling with its worst wave of the virus
since the start of the pandemic. Wednesday also saw the country’s new daily
cases exceed 5,000 for the first time, and the spike in transmissions is
pushing hospitalizations and deaths to record highs.
Amid growing fears about overwhelmed hospitals, health
experts have urged officials to reimpose stricter social distancing rules that
were eased last month to soften the pandemic’s impact on the economy.
KDCA said most of the new 5,123 cases came from the capital,
Seoul, and the surrounding metropolitan region, where officials say nearly 90%
of intensive care units designated for COVID-19 patients are already occupied.
More than 720 virus patients were in serious or critical
condition, also a new high. The country’s fatalities reached 3,658 after
numbering between 30 and 50 a day in recent weeks.
The government eased social distancing rules at the start of
November and fully reopened schools starting Nov. 22 in what officials
described as the first steps toward restoring some pre-pandemic normalcy. In
allowing larger social gatherings and longer indoor dining hours, officials had
hoped that the country’s improving vaccination rates would help keep
hospitalizations and deaths down even if the virus continues to spread.
However, health workers are now wrestling with a rise in
serious cases and deaths among people in their 60s and older who had either
rejected vaccines or whose immunities have waned after being inoculated early
in the immunization campaign that began in February.
The spread has prevented the government from taking further
steps to ease social distancing, but officials have so far resisted calls to
restore stricter gathering rules, citing economic concerns and people’s fatigue
and frustration over extended virus restrictions.
“We cannot retreat to the past by reversing our efforts to
gradually restore normal life,” President Moon Jae-in said during a virus
meeting Monday.
Instead, officials are scrambling to speed up the
administration of booster shots and are managing the sharing of hospital
capacities between the greater Seoul area and other regions with smaller
outbreaks to prevent hospital systems from being overwhelmed. Officials also
said they will revamp medical responses so that most mild cases will be treated
from home.
Son Youngrae, a senior Health Ministry official, said nearly
12,000 virus carriers were being treated from home as of Wednesday morning.
The Korean Federation of Medical Activist Groups for Health
Rights, which represents doctors and health workers, issued a statement
criticizing the government for putting lives at risk with its “ill-prepared”
policies to restore normalcy. It said the government should restore stricter
social distancing rules and procure more beds from private hospitals for
COVID-19 treatment.
“While the government says it will focus on raising
vaccination rates, that cannot be an immediate solution to the current crisis
as it would take time for improved vaccination rates to take effect,” the group
said. “Saying that home treatment will be standard (for mild cases) is just a
way of rationalizing the current situation where a shortage in hospital beds
has forced many virus patients to wait at home. It’s basically a declaration to
give up treatment.” -AP
0 comments:
Post a Comment