COVID-19

South Korean companies take precautions to block COVID-19 spread after holidays

Reuters

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South Korean companies take precautions to block COVID-19 spread after holidays

COVID-19 PREVENTION. Men wearing masks to prevent COVID-19 walk at an empty park in Seoul, South Korea, January 25, 2022.

Kim Hong-ji/Reuters

Kakao Corporation, operator of South Korea's dominant chat app, bars employees from entering the office until February 18 without approval

SEOUL, South Korea – Some of South Korea‘s corporate giants have asked staff to test themselves for COVID-19 before returning to work on Thursday, February 3, after the Lunar New Year holidays, amid concerns the break could fuel the spread of the highly infectious Omicron variant.

Kakao Corporation, operator of South Korea’s dominant chat app, went further and blocked employees from coming to the office for two weeks, as the country’s daily infections hit record highs.

Many people in South Korea traveled during the holidays to see family, likely leading to an uptick in infections.

Kakao barred employees from entering the office until February 18 without approval, with very few exceptions. Even then, the employee is required to self-diagnose with a test kit in a prepared space and enter only after a negative result.

After February 18, Kakao will also deliver 10 at-home test kits, which can be used 20 times, to each employee’s home so they can test themselves before coming to the office, it said in a statement.

Energy group SK Innovation handed out at-home test kits to employees ahead of the holiday and asked them to test themselves before returning to work, and recommended working from home, a spokesperson said.

Battery maker LG Energy Solution also handed out at-home test kits to employees for them to use before returning to work, a spokesperson said.

South Korean government agencies including the Ministry of Health and Welfare took similar precautions, a spokesperson said.

Although more infectious, the fatality rate of the Omicron variant was 0.15%, about one-fifth of the Delta variant’s 0.7%, health ministry official Son Young-rae said on Wednesday, February 2.

“The number of confirmed cases is increasing rapidly due to the Omicron spread, but the medical system remains in a stable situation,” Son said.

The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency reported 22,907 new cases for Wednesday, up 58% from 14,518 last Wednesday. – Rappler.com

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