S. Korea's New Coronavirus Cases Reduced to Double Digits | Be Korea-savvy

S. Korea’s New Coronavirus Cases Reduced to Double Digits


This file photo shows a coronavirus testing center in Seoul. (Yonhap)

This file photo shows a coronavirus testing center in Seoul. (Yonhap)

SEOUL, Nov. 7 (Korea Bizwire) South Korea’s new coronavirus cases fell below 100 on Saturday for the first time in four days as health authorities introduced a revised social distancing scheme.

South Korea confirmed 89 COVID-19 cases, raising the total caseload to 27,284, according to the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA). One more patient died, raising the death toll to 477.

The number of daily virus cases had stayed in the triple digits from Wednesday through Friday.

Of the 89 new cases Saturday, local infections stood at 72, while the rest were imported cases.

The greater Seoul area — home to half of South Korea’s 51 million population — accounted for 51 new cases out of 72 locally transmitted cases.

The public health agency said sporadic cluster infections continued from senior nursing homes and hospitals, as well as private gatherings of families and friends.

As of noon Saturday, an insurance company in western Seoul had reported 26 cases, including 14 employees of the company and eight of their family members.

A total of 19 patients were traced to a brokerage house in western Seoul, up five from a day earlier.

The public health agency said a golf gathering in Yongin, south of Seoul, added five more COVID-19 cases, bringing the cumulative cases traced to the group to 64.

The KDCA said it plans to expand COVID-19 tests on all patients and people working at senior care hospitals and other facilities vulnerable to the coronavirus across the country. The public health agency said tests will be conducted on a regular basis.

So far, 38 COVID-19 cases have been confirmed from three nursing hospitals and four other facilities in Seoul, the surrounding Gyeonggi Province, the southeastern port city of Busan and South Chungcheong Province.

On Saturday, South Korea reported 17 imported cases, raising the cumulated number of imported cases to 3,907.

Of the 17 imported cases, 11 were foreigners and six were South Koreans. They came from the United States, Russia, Myanmar, Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, France, Poland, Ukraine, Hungary, Algeria, Liberia and Ghana.

The KDCA said the total number of people released from quarantine after making full recoveries stood at 24,910, up 89 from the previous day.

Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun (L) hands out face masks to citizens during an antivirus campaign in the Hongdae district of Seoul on Nov. 7, 2020. (Yonhap)

Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun (L) hands out face masks to citizens during an antivirus campaign in the Hongdae district of Seoul on Nov. 7, 2020. (Yonhap)

Also Saturday, South Korea shifted to a five-tier social distancing scheme from the previous three-tier scheme to enforce more detailed and regionally tailored antivirus guidelines while mitigating the impact on businesses.

Currently, South Korea is under Level 1, except the central city of Cheonan and the adjacent city Asan, where social distancing rules were lifted to Level 1.5 earlier this week amid a surge in COVID-19 cases there.

Level 1 — the lowest in the five-tier scheme — signifies a controllable level of transmission that allows people to carry on with their ordinary lives while wearing masks and following social distancing rules at designated facilities.

Under Level 1.5, the operation of multiuse facilities is restricted. At Level 2, the pandemic is considered to be spreading nationwide, and nonessential outdoor visits and gatherings are discouraged in the affected zones.

Level 2.5 will be put in place when the situation is considered to be exceeding the health system’s routine response levels, and the government will urge the public to remain at home.

At Level 3, which will be imposed in the event that more than 800 new daily cases are reported for a week, the nation will effectively be placed on lockdown.

Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun joined a street campaign to publicize the new social distancing system and importance of wearing masks.

He handed out face masks to citizens in the bustling western Seoul district of Hongdae.

“I hope we will overcome COVID-19 with the power of wearing masks, which is a surefire method for COVID-19 prevention,” he said.

(Yonhap)

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