Los Angeles Times

Prime targets for virus in S. Korea

Cases at psych ward and home for disabled underscore threat to the most vulnerable.

- By Victoria Kim

SEOUL — But for the notoriety of the killer that claimed his life, the 63-yearold man’s death at a rural hospital may have gone completely unnoticed.

After two decades confined to a psych ward, he had no known family, friends or other ties to the outside world — no one to be notified, no one to mourn or claim his ashes. At just over 90 pounds at the time of his passing, the man, whose name has not been disclosed, barely took up any space in this world.

His lonely death in the early hours of Feb. 19 became a matter of urgent public interest when he was posthumous­ly confirmed to have the novel coronaviru­s, becoming the first killed by the illness in South Korea. Six others who’d been housed alongside him at the psych ward at the private Cheongdo Daenam Hospital in the country’s southeast, all in their 50s and 60s, also died within days. Of 102 patients in the psych ward, 100 had contracted the deadly virus.

Authoritie­s haven’t determined how the virus made its way into the locked ward, but once it got there, it found easy prey in patients with weakened immune systems living in close, poorly ventilated quarters.

As South Korea has scrambled to contain a surge

of infections that has topped 7,300 and killed 50 in recent weeks, the virus has in particular seeped into the spaces where society’s most frail are gathered or institutio­nalized — the elderly, the mentally ill, the disabled.

The virus overtook a group home for the disabled in the small southeaste­rn town of Chilgok, infecting a third of its 69 residents and staff, then another in the nearby city of Daegu, the country’s fourth-largest city. Pockets of infections were discovered at convalesce­nt hospitals and at nursing homes for the elderly in Gyeongsan, Bonghwa and Cheongdo.

Senior centers across the country abruptly shut their doors after three of those who frequent a center in downtown Seoul tested positive for the virus. They had eaten at the cafeteria and interacted at the center, a public facility where many senior citizens take regular classes and spend their days.

The elderly and those with underlying conditions are particular­ly vulnerable to the virus, which has killed more than 3,800 worldwide and spread to more than 109,000 people in more than 100 countries.

In China, where the vast majority of the deaths have occurred, doctors reported fatality rates of nearly 15% for those 80 years of age or older, compared with 2.3% overall. Those with existing heart disease, diabetes or respirator­y problems have also been several times more likely to die.

Facilities and institutio­ns where the already weakened are living in close quarters are ideal breeding grounds for pathogens in the best of times.

But calamities — epidemics, natural disasters and wars — have a way of further exposing society’s fault lines.

The current outbreak raging across South Korea, some activists and advocates say, is an overdue wake-up call casting light on the country’s reliance on institutio­nalization as a way of caring for its most vulnerable and forcing a reckoning on the conditions in which they are housed.

“It’s not the virus that’s cruel to the weak,” a South Korean newspaper posited recently. “It’s our society, civic groups say, that’s shoved them into isolated environmen­ts ideal for the virus to thrive.”

The psych ward in the hospital where seven have died and nearly all patients have been infected has in particular raised alarm, as photos and details emerged about how patients have lived for decades with little prospect of healing or leaving.

A task force of physicians at South Korea’s National Medical Center overseeing the response to the coronaviru­s outbreak said the ward had no beds, with patients spending most of their days on thin futons on the floor — not a typical standard of care for South Korea.

Many of the patients were found to be malnourish­ed, had issues with hygiene and atrophied muscles from rarely, if ever, having left the hospital for a decade or two, the task force reported last month.

Making matters worse, ventilatio­n was dismal because of windows being sealed to prevent suicides.

“It was characteri­stically a condition for the virus to rapidly spread once it got in,” Lee So-hee, head of psychiatry at the National Medical Center, told reporters. “Conditions at Cheongdo Daenam Hospital were particular­ly bad.”

As the extent of the outbreak became apparent, an alliance of advocates for the disabled lodged a petition with the National Human Rights Commission of Korea decrying conditions, saying other locked facilities housing the sick, disabled and mentally ill were themselves ticking time bombs. There were more than 1,500 group homes for the disabled in South Korea as of 2018.

“We need to examine society’s abuse of having branded the mentally disabled as dangerous and locked them up en masse,” the group Solidarity Against Disability Discrimina­tion said in a statement. “We pray for the deceased who were only freed of the locked ward in death.”

Advocates say these vulnerabil­ities had surfaced in 2015, amid a local outbreak of the Middle East respirator­y syndrome, which killed 38 in South Korea. A coalition of groups working with the disabled sued the government alleging discrimina­tion, saying two disabled patients were forced into quarantine after possibly having come into contact with the infected at a hospital without considerat­ion for their severe disabiliti­es.

“The government is responsibl­e for this reality in which the disabled are disproport­ionately affected in a time of disaster,” said Park Kyung-seok, a longtime advocate who heads the group.

Those who work with South Korea’s rapidly increasing elderly population — the fastest growing in the world — were also on high alert as infections in the country soared. Of the fatalities, more than 80% were at least 60 years old.

Authoritie­s last week discovered a cluster of more than 50 patients and staffers infected with the novel coronaviru­s at a convalesce­nt hospital in Bonghwa County, a mountainou­s area in the east of South Korea. The average age of the infected, many of whom are seriously ill although none have died, is 88.

Chun Yong-man, president of the Korea Assn. of Senior Welfare Centers, said many of South Korea’s elderly are housed in convalesce­nt hospitals focused on medical treatment rather than nursing homes centered on quality of life.

Those hospitals are less regulated and understaff­ed, making them especially vulnerable to a situation such as the coronaviru­s epidemic, he said.

“Of course, the care is inadequate and they’re vulnerable to the dangers of a virus like this,” he said. “We’re all on edge.”

Kim Dong-bae, professor emeritus of social work at Yonsei University, said many of South Korea’s elderly were probably also suffering from an informatio­n gap, being less able to navigate the internet and social media for accurate informatio­n about how to keep safe.

“People are telling me, they haven’t felt this frightened or endangered since the Korean War,” said Kim, who is 70.

At Seoul’s Jongmyo Park, the usual crowds of seniors milling about for company, free meals and games of Go had thinned out but not disappeare­d.

Signs taped to a wall and a pathway said Go games were banned indefinite­ly as a coronaviru­s prevention measure; regardless, half a dozen games were in full swing nearby.

Kim Young-bae, 84, wearing a flat cap and face mask and enjoying the afternoon sun on a bench in the park, was unfazed. He remembered a time after the war when an illness would hit a village and dozens would die at a time, so much so there wasn’t enough cloth to wrap the bodies.

His wife is refusing to leave their home, terrified of the virus, he said. She’s stopped going to the daytime discothequ­e that’s a popular pastime for seniors.

“Does it matter, whether you die locked up in your home, or walking around?” he asked. “Whenever it is, we all go some time.”

 ?? Lim Hwa-young Associated Press ?? A WORKER sprays disinfecta­nt at South Korea’s Cheongdo Daenam Hospital. Seven psychiatri­c ward patients at the hospital have died of the coronaviru­s.
Lim Hwa-young Associated Press A WORKER sprays disinfecta­nt at South Korea’s Cheongdo Daenam Hospital. Seven psychiatri­c ward patients at the hospital have died of the coronaviru­s.
 ?? Ahn Young-joon Associated Press ?? CROWDS wait to buy masks in Seoul. Outbreaks at a psychiatri­c ward and a group home for disabled people in South Korea have underscore­d the threat the coronaviru­s poses to the country’s most vulnerable population­s.
Ahn Young-joon Associated Press CROWDS wait to buy masks in Seoul. Outbreaks at a psychiatri­c ward and a group home for disabled people in South Korea have underscore­d the threat the coronaviru­s poses to the country’s most vulnerable population­s.

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