Moon calls for speeding up booster shots as deaths hit daily record high of 80

President Moon Jae-in called Saturday for speeding up booster shots for the elderly as the country struggles to tackle the fast spread of coronavirus infections, including cases of the new omicron variant.

The country added 6,977 new COVID-19 infections, raising the total caseload to 510,538, according to the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA).

Daily infections soared to a record high of 7,174 cases on Wednesday and remained above 7,000 for the following two days.

The number of critically ill patients came to 856 on Saturday, up four from a day ago, while the death toll hit a daily high of 80, pushing the total up to 4,210.

“Please take special care in speeding up (booster shot inoculations) for seniors in regional communities,” Moon said in a phone conversation with Prime Minister Kim Boo-kyum, according to Kim’s office.

Moon also told Kim to better explain to the public the need to vaccinate young people based on scientific data, amid a growing public backlash against the government’s plan to expand the vaccine pass scheme to teeneagers next year.
As of 9 p.m. Saturday, health authorities had reported 5,481 new cases, up 326 from the same time Friday. Daily cases are tallied until midnight and announced the following morning.

The KDCA said 83.6 percent of the country’s 52 million population have at least received one shot of the vaccine, while 81.1 percent have received two shots and 11.8 percent have gotten their booster shots.

Starting February, the government plans to require not only adults but also children aged 12 to 18 to present COVID-19 vaccination or negative test certificates at multiuse facilities, including public study rooms and cram schools.

The government made the announcement last week along with toughened gathering restrictions amid the latest virus resurgence and a pileup of student infections. But it sparked strong backlash from students and parents arguing the measure amounts to forcing vaccination upon minors.

In a post on Facebook, the prime minister stressed the vaccine pass is “the surest” protection against COVID-19 for not only adults but adolescents as well.

“The government cannot put the lives of our adolescents at risk in order to avoid criticism,” Kim said in defense of the looming vaccine pass measure for teenagers.

The KDCA said the number of people waiting for hospital treatment also hit a record high of 1,508, up 250 from Friday. Of those, 583 were patients aged 70 or above.

The rate of hospital beds in use for critical patients in the capital area stood at 83.9 percent as of 5 p.m. Friday. The national figure was recorded at 79 percent.

On Monday, the government enforced stricter social distancing rules to contain the rapid spread of the coronavirus and the omicron variant.

Under the new measures, which will remain in effect until Jan. 2, private gatherings are limited to six people in the greater Seoul area and eight in the rest of the country.

More business facilities now need to require visitors to be fully vaccinated or to show a negative COVID-19 test result. Newly added to the so-called vaccine pass system include restaurants, coffee shops, cram schools and internet cafes.

The KDCA has confirmed 12 new omicron cases, pushing the total up to 75.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

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