The Citizen (Gauteng)

Young people at centre of surge

SOUTH KOREA: MORE ASYMPTOMAT­IC PATIENTS

- Seoul

Worry about rise in untraceabl­e, hard to identify, cases.

Asymptomat­ic Covid-19 patients are driving a surge in new cases in South Korea, frustratin­g efforts to control transmissi­on by the Asian country which kept infections under control in previous outbreaks.

South Korea reported 569 new cases in the 24 hours ending at midnight on Thursday, a level unseen in nearly nine months, as it grapples with the third wave of the pandemic that appears to be worsening despite tough new social distancing measures.

With young people at the centre of the surge, health authoritie­s estimate asymptomat­ic patients now account for 40% of total infections, up sharply from 20-30% in June. That compares with research evidence suggesting about one in five infected people will experience no symptoms.

The rate is much lower in China where the state disease control centre said in February that around 1% of more than 70 000 cases it analysed were asymptomat­ic. In Tokyo, about 19% of patients are asymptomat­ic.

It’s not clear why some patients who test positive for the virus do not display any symptoms, but health officials believe they pose less transmissi­on risks. However, the people they infect may display symptoms. Also, the officials are concerned about a rise in untraceabl­e clusters since these asymptomat­ic infections are more difficult to identify.

Cold weather is further accelerati­ng the spread as more meetings and activities are held indoors in places with poor ventilatio­n, while the risk of unwitting infections by symptomles­s patients has increased.

That poses a major challenge in South Korea, which succeeded in keeping infections low in previous outbreaks through aggressive contact tracing. It has introduced tougher social distancing measures this week to contain transmissi­on and encouraged people to get tested.

“We should have maintained tough social distancing measures longer,” said Kim Woo-joo, a professor of infectious diseases at Korea University Guro Hospital.

“In the wake of eased social distancing measures in early October, a lot of people, especially young people, let their guard down and many of those who had very mild symptoms or no symptoms have gone unnoticed.”

As young people drive the surge in new cases, the number of young patients in serious conditions and in need of ventilator­s shot up to 19 this week in South Korea to nearly one fourth of total patients who need ventilator support. –

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