South Korean Health Official Says Country May Need To Reimpose Social Distance Measures

People wearing face masks arrive at the domestic flight terminal of Gimpo airport in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, May 27, 2020. The quarantine authorities on Wednesday began to require all airplane passengers to we... People wearing face masks arrive at the domestic flight terminal of Gimpo airport in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, May 27, 2020. The quarantine authorities on Wednesday began to require all airplane passengers to wear masks amid the coronavirus pandemic. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon) MORE LESS
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SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea’s top infectious disease expert says the country may need to reimpose social distancing restrictions it eased in April, with coronavirus transmissions creeping up in the populated Seoul metropolitan area and elsewhere in recent weeks.

Jeong Eun-kyeong, director of South Korea’s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said during a virus briefing it’s becoming increasingly difficult for health workers to track the spread of COVID-19, which has coincided with increased public activity amid warmer weather and eased attitudes on social distancing.

South Korea reported 40 new cases on Wednesday, its biggest daily jump in nearly 50 days, as officials scrambled to trace hundreds of infections linked to nightspots, restaurants and a massive e-commerce warehouse near Seoul.

Jeong stressed the importance of social distancing and avoiding crowded spaces, saying, “we will do our best to trace contacts and implement preventive measures, but there’s a limit to such efforts.”

South Korea was reporting around 500 new cases per day in early March before managing to stabilize its outbreak with aggressive tracking and testing, which allowed officials to relax social distancing guidelines and proceed with a phased reopening of schools.

But Seoul and nearby cities restored some controls in recent weeks by shutting thousands of bars, karaoke rooms and other entertainment venues to slow the spread of the virus. Education authorities in Seoul say they delayed class openings in 111 schools due to virus concerns.

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  1. Jeong stressed the importance of social distancing and avoiding crowded spaces, saying, “we will do our best to trace contacts and implement preventive measures, but there’s a limit to such efforts.”

    …a tiny fact lost on many in this country.

  2. And this is exactly where the United States is headed, with far less testing/tracing. Part of me really wants this disaster to continue right up to November, but that’s just wrong.

  3. We won’t do any of those reasonable things, so we’re in for a tsunami in just a few weeks.

  4. “. . . it’s becoming increasingly difficult for health workers to track the spread of COVID-19, . . .”

    If contact tracing can’t work in a physically small country with a population less than California, it certainly won’t work in the U.S. to any great degree.

  5. The hell you do. Things will get violent by then if this does because Trump will somehow try to steal the election.

    The best hope we have at this point is that Trump dies from CoVid well before the election.

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