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Nearly 70 pct of public say 'living with COVID-19' scheme raised health risk: poll

Dec. 11, 2021 - 12:36 By Yonhap

 

People form a line to receive tests at a COVID-19 testing station in Seoul on Friday, when the country reported 7,022 new cases. (Yonhap)


Seven out of 10 South Koreans believe the government's "living with COVID-19" campaign has elevated the risk of virus transmission, according to a poll released Saturday.

The survey -- commissioned by a research team led by Prof. Yoo Myung-soon of Seoul National University's graduate school of public health -- found that 69 percent of respondents said they saw the public risk related to COVID-19 as having increased after implementation of the scheme aimed at returning to normal life while treating the virus as a seasonal disease.

It said 23.1 percent assessed the risk level from the government measures as "normal," while 8 percent said the risk level has not increased.

The alarming increase in recent cases and the emergence of the omicron variant in the country was not reflected in the survey conducted last month.

Almost half of respondents believed that the government has not prepared sufficient measures against an increase in transmission risks. Of those, 58.1 percent pointed to the lack of hospital beds and 29.8 percent said medical workers to treat critical patients needed to be increased.

The survey was conducted on 912 adults from Nov. 22 to Nov. 29 and had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.25 percentage points, according to the pollster Hankook Research. (Yonhap)