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VIDEO A day of a Korean psychiatrist living in a country that won't admit it needs one

South Korea has held the highest suicide rate in the OECD for years — more than double the global average. It also has one of the lowest doctor-to-patient ratios in the developed world. The math is grim, and well-documented. What it doesn't explain is why so many Koreans who need help still won't walk through a psychiatrist's door. The reason often comes down to two letters and a number. In Korea's national health insurance system, every psychiatric visit is logged under an "F code" — the classification used for mental and behavioral disorders. F32 for depression. F41 for anxiety. F90 for ADHD. The codes are protected by medical confidentiality law and cannot be shared without the patient's consent. And yet the fear of the F code is one of the most persistent reasons Koreans avoid psychiatric care. Patients worry the code will resurface — in a future insurance application, a background check, some unspecified moment where a single record might cost them something. It is a fear shaped less by what the law permits than by what Korean society still quietly believes: that depression i

By Yu Seung-eun
[VIDEO] A day of a Korean psychiatrist  living in a country that won't admit it needs one
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CEO & Publisher: Oh Young-jinDigital News Email: webmaster@koreatimes.co.krTel: 02-724-2114Online newspaper registration No: 서울,아52844Date of registration: 2020.02.05Masthead: The Korea TimesCopyright © koreatimes.co.kr. All rights reserved.

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Interview with Jed Emerson on 'impact investment'

The Korea Times' Digital managing editor Oh Young-jin had an interview with Jed Emerson over "impact investing," which refers to directing capital to enterprises that generate social or environmental benefits - a terrain traditional business models often sidestep. 

Nov 6, 2018By Lee Min-young
Interview with Jed Emerson on 'impact investment'
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Cuban President meets North Korea's Kim Jong Un to boost bilateral ties

Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel held talks with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un upon his arrival to Pyongyang on Sunday (November 4) to boost bilateral ties.Diaz-Canel and his delegation, which included the Vice President of Cuba's Council of Ministers Ricardo Cabrisas Ruiz and several other cabinet ministers, were met by honor guard and their North Korean counterparts on the tarmac.The Cuban leader arrived from Russia where he met Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday (November 2).He is now travelling through Asia with China, Vietnam and Laos next on the itinerary. (Reuters)

Nov 5, 2018By Choi Won-suk
Cuban President meets North Korea's Kim Jong Un to boost bilateral ties
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Thousands prepare 40 tons of kimchi for Seoul's poor

Thousands of people in the South Korean capital on Friday (November 2) cooked up a 40-ton feast of traditional spicy cabbage known as kimchi, at a charity event for the city's poor.Sporting red hats and pink gloves, more than 2,000 people gathered around long tables set up in Seoul City Hall Square to make the strong smelling dish of fermented cabbage, spice paste, garlic, ginger, and fish sauce.Organisers said 3,000 people will make kimchi for a Guiness World Record on Sunday (November 4) and they are aiming to make a total 165 tonnes of kimchi for three days to distribute to the poor in Seoul.Per capita consumption of Kimchi in South Korea is 36.1kg per year, according to the World Institute of Kimchi. (Reuters)A girl makes Kimchi to donate to needy neighbors in preparation for the winter season during the Seoul Kimchi Festival at Seoul Plaza in Seoul, South Korea, Friday, Nov. 2, 2018. Korea Times photo by Shim Hyun-chulThousands of participants make kimchi to donate to needy neighbors in preparation for the winter season during the Seoul Kimchi Festival at Seoul Plaza i

Nov 4, 2018By Choi Won-suk
Thousands prepare 40 tons of kimchi for Seoul's poor
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Sex abuse 'routine' in North Korea - report

Sexual abuse by officials in positions of authority in North Korea appears to be widespread, according to Human Rights Watch Executive Director, Kenneth Roth. Sexual violence - so common that it's become an ordinary part of life. That's what more than sixty North Koreans told human rights investigators about the wide spread sex abuse by officials in the country.U.S.-based Human Rights Watch say the isolated state's human rights record is being intentionally ignored in an international effort to improve relations.They presented their findings on Thursday (November 1), and while the survey's limited in numbers, they said some of the women interviewed didn't understand that coercive sex shouldn't be a part of almost everyday life.HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH'S EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, KENNETH ROTH, SAYING:"Many North Koreans told Human Rights Watch that when an official or person in power picks a woman, she has no choice but to comply. She has to do whatever he demands whether it's for sex, money, or other favors."As Seoul and Washington focus on diplomatic outreach to North Korea, a series of re

Nov 4, 2018By Choi Won-suk
Sex abuse 'routine' in North Korea - report
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Expert interview on North Korea energy issues

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Nov 1, 2018
Expert interview on North Korea energy issues
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North Korean leader criticizes sanctions at a resort construction site

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un condemned international sanctions on the country's nuclear program while he visited a resort construction site, North Korean state media reported on Thursday (November 1).The North's state-run television KRT released several still photographs of Kim inspecting a large construction project at a tourism resort in Wonsan along with high-ranking officials. During the inspection, Kim told workers that such economic projects are a new "decisive battle" for supporting the ruling party, pushing back against international sanctions over the nuclear program, KRT said. He also blamed the 'hostile forces' and sanctions by them and emphatized to build the nation's strenth on its own, according to KRT.American officials have been skeptical of Kim's commitment to giving up nuclear weapons, but the North's pledge at the summit with the South drew an enthusiastic response from President Donald Trump, who met Kim in an unprecedented summit in June and has been keen on a second meeting.Washington has demanded steps such as a full disclosure of the North's nuclear and mis

Nov 1, 2018By Choi Won-suk
North Korean leader criticizes sanctions at a resort construction site
News

China eases ban on trade of rhino and tiger parts

China has allowed the use of rhino and tiger products in medicine, alarming conservationists who say it will hamper efforts to protect them from extinction. China's State Council recently announced the partial lifting of a 25-year-old ban which will now allow the use of tiger and rhinoceros parts for scientific, medical, or cultural use.According to the New York Times, powdered rhino horns are used in Chinese traditional medicine to treat fevers and food poisoning, while tiger bone wine is believed to increase virility. Both have no proven benefit.The Chinese government claims the trade will be strictly controlled, and products must only be sourced from animals that are bred in captivity, excluding those in zoos. But conservationists say the move will only fuel black market trade in wild animal parts, endangering the estimated 30,000 rhinos and 3,900 tigers still in the wild.The move is a complete turnaround from Beijing's previous efforts in championing climate change initiatives and banning the domestic ivory trade. Experts speculate that the sudden easing of the ban may be a push

Nov 1, 2018By Choi Won-suk
China eases ban on trade of rhino and tiger parts
News

ON THE SPOT - Halloween in Korea

Over the past decade or so, Halloween has begun to seep into the nation's culture, and now it has become a huge annual event for young Koreans. I was out at one of the hottest Halloween spots in Seoul to join the crowd all wearing spooky costumes and having fun taking pictures with total strangers. 

Nov 1, 2018By Lee Min-young
ON THE SPOT - Halloween in Korea
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Japan denounces South Korean court decision as "unthinkable"

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said on Tuesday (October 30) that a South Korean court's order to a Japanese firm to compensate wartime forced laborers was "unthinkable," and the ruling overturned the legal basis for bilateral friendship since 1965.South Korea's top court ruled on Tuesday Japan's Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal Corp. must compensate four South Koreans for their forced labor during World War Two.Following the verdict, Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono summoned South Korean ambassador Lee Su-hoon. Kono told Lee that he hopes South Korean government will immediately and resolutely respond to the controversial matter.Japan and South Korea share a bitter history that includes Japan's 35-year occupation of the Korean peninsula until 1945 and the use of comfort women, Japan's euphemism for girls and women, many of them Korean, forced to work in its wartime brothels. (Reuters)

Oct 31, 2018By Choi Won-suk
Japan denounces South Korean court decision as "unthinkable"
  • $87,000 each: Japanese firm ordered to compensate wartime forced laborers
News

South Korean court orders Nippon Steel to compensate WWII workers

South Korea's top court ruled on Tuesday (October 30) Japan's Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal Corp. should compensate four South Koreans for their forced labour during World War Two, a decision that could freeze ties between the uneasy neighbours.In a landmark ruling, South Korea's Supreme Court upheld a 2013 order for the company to pay 100 million won ($87,700) to each of the four steel workers who initiated the suit in 2005, seeking compensation and unpaid wages.Lee Choon-shik, the 94-year-old sole surviving plaintiff, welcomed the ruling.Japan and South Korea share a bitter history that includes Japan's 35-year occupation of the Korean peninsula until 1945 and the use of comfort women, Japan's euphemism for girls and women, many of them Korean, forced to work in its wartime brothels. (Reuters)

Oct 31, 2018By Choi Won-suk
South Korean court orders Nippon Steel to compensate WWII workers
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