Covid mask is not mandated anymore in South Korean hospitals
text_fieldsSeoul: The final remaining COVID-related restriction continued in the hospitals of North Korea has been lifted today after four years.
As per the Central Disaster and Safety Countermeasures Headquarters, the country will, effective from Wednesday, lower the four-grade Covid crisis level from the second-highest "alert" to the lowest "concern" in a move to fully return to pre-pandemic normalcy, Yonhap news agency reported.
The decision came more than four years after the country reported its first case of the new coronavirus on January 20, 2020.
Upon the move, mask mandates at hospitals and relevant facilities were completely lifted, and infection tests ahead of admission to nursing hospitals and other risk-prone facilities became a recommendation, rather than a must.
The government no longer fully supports Covid testing or hospitalisation costs, and patients need to pay for an oral antiviral pill, including Paxlovid.
The free vaccination programme continues to be available through the 2023-2024 season, which will later be limited to high-risk groups, such as senior citizens and those with immune-compromised health issues, the authorities said.
Source: IANS