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South Korea to buy millions of vaccine doses as coronavirus cases surge

  • Health authorities predicted daily cases would hover between 550 and 750 this week, and possibly spike to as much as 900 next week.
Published December 8, 2020

SEOUL: South Korea said on Tuesday it had signed deals to provide coronavirus vaccines for 44 million people next year, as the country battles a wave of infections that authorities say could overwhelm its medical system.

The government has arranged to buy 20 million doses each from AstraZeneca Plc, Pfizer Inc, and Moderna Inc, and another 4 million doses from Johnson & Johnson's Janssen, enough to cover up to 34 million people, Health Minister Park Neung-hoo told a briefing.

Additional doses for 10 million people would be procured through the World Health Organization's global vaccine project, known as COVAX, he added.

"We had initially planned to secure vaccines for 30 million people but decided to purchase more, as there is uncertainty over the success of the vaccine candidates and the competition is intense among countries for early purchases," he said.

Shipments of the vaccine would begin no later than March, but authorities would observe how the vaccines worked in other countries for several months to ensure safety. Widespread vaccination was likely to begin in the second half of next year.

Despite the current surge in cases, South Korea's relative success in tamping down previous waves meant the government did not need to rush a vaccine, Park said.

"We don't see the need to hurriedly begin vaccination without ensuring that the vaccines' risks have been verified," he said. The first vaccines would likely go to medical workers, elderly and medically vulnerable people, and social workers.

WAVE OF INFECTIONS

The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency reported 594 new coronavirus cases as of midnight Monday, bringing the country's total to 38,755, with 552 deaths.

Unlike South Korea's previous two waves of infections, which were largely focused around a handful of facilities or events, the new wave is being driven by smaller, harder-to-trace clusters in and around the densely populated capital city of Seoul.

Vice Health Minister Kang Do-tae said the government had been unable to trace the origin of 26% of all cases, and the positivity rate spiked nearly fourfold within a month to about 4%.

"If social distancing is not implemented properly, outbreaks in the greater Seoul area would lead to greater transmissions nationwide," Kang told a meeting of health officials according to a transcript from the health ministry.

Health authorities predicted daily cases would hover between 550 and 750 this week, and possibly spike to as much as 900 next week.

If such predictions are accurate, Kang said the country's health system may collapse.

"There could be a dangerous situation where it becomes difficult not only to treat COVID-19 patients but also to provide essential medical services," he said.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in called on Monday for expanded coronavirus testing and more thorough tracing as infections continued to rise despite the imposition of increasingly restrictive social distancing measures.

Seoul was not currently in talks to buy vaccines from either Russia or China, Park said.

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