PostedMay 17, 2022, 1:47 p.m.
The health situation continues to worsen in North Korea, where six new deaths were announced on Tuesday.
North Korea announced on Tuesday that it had recorded six new deaths from “fever”, according to the official North Korean agency KCNA, bringing the toll to 56 deaths a few days following admitting to being hit by the Covid-19 epidemic. KCNA said the army had “urgently deployed its forces to all pharmacies in Pyongyang and started to supply medicines”.
Despite large-scale confinements, the toll stood Monday evening at 56 dead, more than 1,483,060 cases of “fever” and 663,910 people under treatment, according to the agency.
Leader Kim Jong Un on Monday sharply criticized health authorities for their handling of the outbreak, particularly the failure to keep pharmacies open 24 hours a day.
The report released by KCNA on Tuesday said “urgent measures have been taken to immediately rectify the discrepancies in drug supply,” including the round-the-clock operation of pharmacies in the capital Pyongyang.
Since the country announced its first case of Covid last Thursday, Kim Jong Un has taken personal charge of the fight once morest the epidemic, which he says is causing “great upheaval” in the country, whose population is not not vaccinated. He oversees near-daily emergency Politburo meetings, and North Korean media released photos of him visiting a pharmacy in Pyongyang on Sunday.
“Intensive medical examination”
KCNA reported on Tuesday that efforts are underway to educate the masses regarding “stealth variant Omicron to give them an in-depth understanding of scientific treatment methods and epidemic prevention rules.”
Some 11,000 civil servants, teachers and medical students meanwhile took part in an “intensive medical examination of all residents” on Monday to identify people with fever, according to the same source.
North Korea’s healthcare system was ranked 193rd out of 195 countries in a study by Johns Hopkins University of the United States last year. The country’s hospitals are poorly equipped, with few intensive care units. According to experts, the country has no treatment for Covid-19 and does not have the capacity to massively test its population.
(AFP)