The Korea Times

New COVID-19 cases rise to nearly 350,000 amid ‘stealth Omicron’ woes

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Korea’s new daily COVID-19 cases rose to around 350,000 Tuesday, ending a downturn for five consecutiv­e days, amid the fast spread of the highly transmissi­ble “stealth Omicron” subvariant.

The country added 347,554 new coronaviru­s infections, including 41 cases from overseas, bringing the total caseload to 12,350,428, the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) said.

Tuesday’s tally marked a surge from 187,213 cases the previous day, when the daily count came to a nearly one-month low. The daily caseload had been on a constant slide from Wednesday through Monday.

The country added 237 new COVID-19 deaths Tuesday, up 50 from the previous day’s tally. The fatality rate stood at 0.12 percent.

The number of critically ill patients came to 1,215, down 58 from Monday, the KDCA said.

Serious cases rose to above 1,000 earlier this month and have since been above the level. The KDCA said the number of deaths and serious cases could grow further in the coming weeks.

The health authoritie­s have said that the Omicron-driven virus wave peaked last week, and new infections are forecast to fall below 300,000 on average in two weeks, though the possibilit­y of an upturn remains over the spread of the even more transmissi­ble “stealth omicron” subvariant. The BA.2 subvariant became the dominant strain in the country by accounting for 56.3 percent of the total infections last week, according to the KDCA.

The rate has been on the rise from 22.9 percent in the first week of this month to 26.3 percent in the second week and further to 41.4 percent the following week, it added.

As of Tuesday, 32.67 million people out of the total population, or 63.7 percent, had received booster shots.

 ?? AP-Yonhap ?? People wearing face masks as a precaution against the coronaviru­s cross Cheonggye Stream in downtown Seoul, Tuesday.
AP-Yonhap People wearing face masks as a precaution against the coronaviru­s cross Cheonggye Stream in downtown Seoul, Tuesday.

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