South Korea sets high of 8,000 new virus cases ahead of holiday

But vaccination and booster shots still provide strong protection from serious illness, hospitalisation and death.As of Tuesday, more than 85 per cent of South Koreas more than 51 million 5.1 crore people have been fully vaccinated.


PTI | Seoul | Updated: 25-01-2022 07:57 IST | Created: 25-01-2022 07:57 IST
South Korea sets high of 8,000 new virus cases ahead of holiday
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  • South Korea

South Korea recorded more than 8,000 new coronavirus infections for the first time on Tuesday as health authorities reshape the country's pandemic response to address a surge driven by the highly contagious Omicron variant.

The 8,571 new cases reported by the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency followed three straight days exceeding 7,000. With Omicron spreading more than twice as fast as the Delta strain that caused the last surge, experts say new cases may exceed 10,000 this week and possibly 20,000 after the Lunar New Year's holiday break that begins this weekend and continues to next Wednesday.

To prevent a sudden explosion of infections from overwhelming hospitals and disrupting workplaces and essential services, South Korea will reduce quarantine periods, expand testing and treat more people at home.

From Wednesday, the quarantine periods for people who test positive after being fully vaccinated will be reduced from the current 10 days to seven days. Fully vaccinated people who come in close contact with virus carriers will not be placed under quarantine. Officials are also planning to treat a larger number of mild or moderate cases at home and expand the use of rapid antigen tests to detect more infections sooner.

Omicron has become the dominant variant in many countries and more easily infects those who have been vaccinated or had COVID-19 previously. But vaccination and booster shots still provide strong protection from serious illness, hospitalisation and death.

As of Tuesday, more than 85 per cent of South Korea's more than 51 million (5.1 crore) people have been fully vaccinated. More than 49 per cent of the population have been administered booster shots.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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