After COVID Isolation Recommendation... 3 to 4 out of 10 People Do Not Isolate
Temporary screening clinics dismantled last month following the endemic declaration
View original imageSince the quarantine requirement for COVID-19 positive cases changed to a quarantine recommendation last month, a survey found that 3 to 4 out of 10 people do not self-isolate even if they have COVID symptoms.
The research team led by Professor Yum Myung-soon at Seoul National University Graduate School of Public Health conducted a perception survey on the downgrade of the COVID-19 crisis level among 1,000 adults aged 18 and over from March 23 to 26 last month, and announced the results on the 4th.
Since the COVID-19 crisis level was downgraded from 'Severe' to 'Alert' last month, confirmed COVID-19 cases are given a 5-day quarantine recommendation instead of a 7-day quarantine requirement. From this point, 13.5% (135 people) of respondents reported experiencing respiratory symptoms of COVID-19 such as cough, sore throat, runny nose, and fever. When asked whether they quarantined, 60.7% of these respondents (51.1% voluntarily, 9.6% involuntarily) answered that they did quarantine. However, 34.8% said they did not quarantine. Among them, 'voluntarily not quarantining' was the largest group at 29.6%, and 'involuntarily not quarantining' was 5.2%.
When asked whether they took a COVID test when experiencing respiratory symptoms, the most common response was 'tested at a hospital or clinic' at 41.5%. This was followed by 'did not test' at 32.6% and 'self-tested' at 25.9%.
Overall, 55.4% of respondents reported not paying attention to recent domestic COVID-19 infection status information. 'Not paying attention at all' was 14.9%, and 'not paying much attention' was 40.5%. The health authorities provide COVID infection status information once a week every Monday after the downgrade of the crisis level. The percentage of respondents who said they 'pay attention' was 44.3% ('somewhat pay attention' 38.3%, 'pay close attention' 6.0%).
While mask-wearing is still mandatory in hospital-level or higher medical institutions and residential infection-vulnerable facilities, 84.4% of respondents agreed with these mandatory measures.
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Regarding perceptions on maintaining the mandatory measures, the most common response was 'maintain for the time being and lift when the situation stabilizes' at 55.8%. 'Continue to maintain the mandate' was 31.0%, and 'lift the mandate as soon as possible' was 10.5%.
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