Lacking vaccines, N.Korea battles COVID with antibiotics, home remedies
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[May 16, 2022]
By SungHyuk An and Heejung Jung
SEOUL (Reuters) - Standing tall in bright
red hazmat suits, five North Korean health workers stride towards an
ambulance to do battle with a COVID-19 outbreak that - in the presumed
absence of vaccines - the country is using antibiotics and home remedies
to treat.
The isolated state is one of only two countries yet to begin a
vaccination campaign and, until last week, had insisted it was COVID-free.
Now it is mobilizing forces including the army and a public information
campaign to combat what authorities have acknowledged is an "explosive"
outbreak.
In an interview on state television on Monday, Vice Minister of Public
Health Kim Hyong Hun said the country had switched from a quarantine to
a treatment system to handle the hundreds of thousands of suspected
"fever" cases reported each day.
The broadcaster showed footage of the hazmat team, and masked workers
opening windows, cleaning desks and machines and spraying disinfectant.
To treat COVID and its symptoms, state media have encouraged patients to
use painkillers and fever reducers such as ibuprofen, and amoxicillin
and other antibiotics - which do not fight viruses but are sometimes
prescribed for secondary bacterial infections.
While previously playing down vaccines as "no panacea", media have also
recommended gargling salt water, or drinking lonicera japonica tea or
willow leaf tea three times a day.
"Traditional treatments are the best!" one woman told state broadcasters
as her husband described having their children gargle with salted water
every morning and night.
An elderly Pyongyang resident said she had been helped by ginger tea and
ventilating her room.
"I was first scared by COVID, but after following the doctors' advice
and getting the proper treatments, it turned out not a big deal," she
said in a televised interview.
'LACK OF UNDERSTANDING'
The country’s leader, Kim Jong Un, said on Sunday - when state news
agency KCNA reported 392,920 more cases of fever and eight more deaths –
that drugs reserves were not reaching people, and ordered the army
medical corps to help stabilize supplies in Pyongyang, where the
outbreak appears to be centred.
KCNA said the cumulative tally of the fever-stricken stood at 1,213,550,
with 50 deaths. It did not say how many suspected infections had tested
positive for COVID.
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People wearing protective face masks walk amid concerns over the new
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Pyongyang, North Korea May 15,
2020, in this photo released by Kyodo. Mandatory credit Kyodo/via
REUTERS/File Photo
Authorities say a large proportion
of the deaths have been due to people "careless in taking drugs due
to the lack of knowledge and understanding" of the Omicron variant
and the correct method for treating it.
The World Health Organization has shipped some health kits and other
supplies to North Korea, but has not said what drugs they contain.
Neighbours China and South Korea have offered to send aid if
Pyongyang requests it.
While not claiming that antibiotics and home
remedies will eliminate COVID, North Korea has a long history of
developing scientifically unproven treatments, including an
injection made from ginseng grown in rare earth elements it claimed
could cure everything from AIDS to impotence.
Some have roots in traditional medicines, while others have been
developed to offset a lack of modern drugs or as "made in North
Korea" exports.
Despite a high number of trained doctors and experience mobilizing
for health emergencies, North Korea's medical system is woefully
under-resourced, experts say.
In a March report, an independent U.N. human rights investigator
said it was plagued by "under-investment in infrastructure, medical
personnel, equipment and medicine, irregular power supplies and
inadequate water and sanitation facilities".
Kim Myeong-Hee, 40, who left the North for South Korea in 2003, said
such shortcomings led many North Koreans to rely on home remedies.
"Even if we go to the hospital, there are actually no medicines.
There was also no electricity so medical equipment could not be
used," she said.
When she contracted acute hepatitis, she said she was told to take
minari - a water parsley made famous by the 2020 film of the same
name – every day, and to eat earthworms when afflicted by another,
unknown illness.
Home remedies had sometimes failed to prevent loss of life during
epidemics in the 1990s, Kim added.
(Writing by Josh Smith; editing by John Stonestreet)
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