South Korea reported on the 17th that there were 621,328 new cases of COVID-19 and 429 deaths.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say the spread of omicron mutations has led to a flurry of information about the spread of the virus, and while public research has raised concerns that people are infected, some fear illness serious.

Modern diseases are higher than those estimated by health officials. On Wednesday, the government said it expects the wave to rise with current levels of around 400,000. Just over a month ago it was estimated that 140,000 to 270,000 modern cases would rise by mid-March. Despite the figures, the government does not see the result of an overhaul of its plans to lift nearly all relationship bans in the coming days or weeks, and public sentiment appears to support mobility.

It plans to extend restrictions on restaurants until 11 p.m., ban vaccinations and remove the exclusion for vaccinated travelers from abroad. .

A determination of whether further action, such as restricting the current person from assembly, should be taken is expected as early as Friday. South Korea also acts as a mask in all indoor and outdoor public places.

While South Korea had yet to adopt the "COVID-Zero" policy and ban general shutdowns, South Korea once used strict, tracking and segregation measures to control the situation. It is usually closed or reduced but still undergoes extensive testing.

Experts say South Korea has a policy of preventing death and serious illness, usually through widespread vaccination, while avoiding problems in these areas.li Hong Kong.

According to the KDCA, almost 63% of the population of 52 million people have been vaccinated and 86.6% of the total population have been vaccinated.

"A government study of 141,000 micron patients reported in the country last year showed no deaths among the population under 60 who received additional doses," lead Son Young-rae said Wednesday.

Son Jeong-eui said in a nutshell, “I think this situation might be the biggest problem in our corona cancer response.” According to a study reported Tuesday by Seoul National University's Graduate School of Public Health, the number of South Koreans who believe they are infected is around 28%, the highest since the study began in January 2020. People who worry about the severity of the infection are lowest in the region of 48%.

Professor Myung-soon Myung-soon, who led the study, said: "People's perception of the dangers of the disease has changed dramatically."

"The Omicron variant is more contagious than the Delta, but has a lower mortality rate, which appears to have reduced anxiety in humans."