More than 180 such cases have been reported so far in South Korea but none were found to have infected anyone else.
The medical authorities in South Korea initially conduct polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests on suspected cases.
But investigating people who appear to suffer a relapse after recovering from COVID-19, the KCDC takes cultures of the virus, a process that takes more than two weeks before reliable results become evident.
So far, culture tests are underway for 39 cases, but all six completed so far have been negative.
“That means the virus in the relapse cases have little to no infectiousness,” KCDC director Jeong Eun-kyeong told a briefing.
Jeong dismissed the idea of replacing PCR tests with culture tests to determine whether a patient has fully recovered, due to the amount of time and resources that they require.
The KCDC said it is still examining why some patients test positive again after recovering.
Among the main possibilities are re-infection, a relapse, or inconsistent tests, experts say, and Jeong has said the virus may have been “reactivated” rather than the patients being re-infected.
The death toll stands at 238.
After grappling with the first major outbreak outside China, South Korea has largely managed to bring the outbreak under control without major disruptions thanks to a massive testing campaign and intensive contact tracing.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-southkorea-relapse/south-korea-finds-patients-testing-positive-post-recovery-from-coronavirus-barely-infectious-idUSKCN2241K2
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