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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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The 479th Turtle Marathon

  The sweep of brisk fall weather into the country would mean one thing for morning exercisers - set out for a walk along paths of beautiful fall foliage. I was there myself at the Namsan Park, one of the best autumn trails in Seoul, to take part in the 479th Turtle Marathon which was held under the theme "Walking with Global Families."

Oct 29, 2018
The 479th Turtle Marathon
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Plastic to ride: Indonesians swap bottles for bus tickets

Plastic is just the ticket if you want to ride the buses of Surabaya. Bus commuters can pay their fare with used plastic bottles in Indonesia's second city.A two-hour bus ticket costs 10 plastic cups or up to five plastic bottles, depending on their size. This could help the city achieve its aim to be free of plastic waste by 2020.RESIDENT OF SURABAYA, LINDA RAHMAWATI, SAYING:"Garbage like plastic bottles piles up in my neighbourhood, so I brought them here so the environment is not only cleaner, but it will also help to ease the workload of garbage collectors."RESIDENT OF SURABAYA, SULASTRI, SAYING:"We can reduce trash so it doesn't pile up at home because we can just bring them here and make good use of it. It is a win-win situation."Commuters drop their plastic off at bus terminals or "pay" their fare on the bus.City data shows 250kg of plastic bottles can be collected a day this way - the equivalent of 7.5 tonnes a month.The bottles are auctioned off to recycling companies, helping fund bus operations and green spaces in the city.HEAD OF TRANSPORTATION DEPARTMENT OF SURABAYA CITY

Oct 29, 2018By Choi Won-suk
Plastic to ride: Indonesians swap bottles for bus tickets
  • South Korea bans disposable plastic bags from big supermarkets
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Artificial sweeteners may be toxic to digestive gut microbes

New studies find that artificial sweeteners may be toxic to gut microbiome.Science Daily reports that researchers from the Ben Gurion University of the Negev in Israel and Nanyang Technological Institute in Singapore modified E. coli to light up when exposed to toxins, using it as a sensing model representative of the complex gut microbial system.Exposure to six types of popular artificial sweeteners, which include aspartame and sucralose among others, had a toxic, stressing effect that made it difficult for the bacteria to grow and reproduce.A separate study carried out in Australia looked at 29 healthy adults and randomly administered the capsule equivalent of drinking 1.5 liters of diet soda a day to 14 of the participants. The other 15 were given a placebo, according to a report in Diabetologia.After two weeks, the amount of good bacteria in the 14 subjects' gut had decreased, while gut pathogens had increased — potentially affecting the body's ability to regulate glucose.But while both studies' findings are compelling, experts say they are insufficient to establish causali

Oct 29, 2018By Choi Won-suk
Artificial sweeteners may be toxic to digestive gut microbes
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Not exercising worse for health than smoking, diabetes and heart disease

Research has found that being fit can lead to a longer life, and that being sedentary is even deadlier than some diseases.According to a study published in JAMA Network Open, not exercising is more harmful to human health than smoking, diabetes, or heart disease.Researchers at the Cleveland Clinic studied 122,007 patients from January 1, 1991 to December 31, 2014, making them undergo treadmill testing and later recording mortality rates.Their findings indicate that cardiorespiratory fitness is linked to a longer lifespan, and that there is no limit to the benefits of exercise. There have been concerns that those who are overactive or exercise excessively are at a higher risk of death, but the research reveals that this is not the case.When compared to top exercise performers, the risk associated with death for those who were sedentary is 500 percent higher.The study concludes that a sedentary lifestyle is equivalent to having a major disease. (Next Animation via Reuters)

Oct 28, 2018By Choi Won-suk
Not exercising worse for health than smoking, diabetes and heart disease
News

South Korea exhumes remains of soldiers in DMZ

South Korea exhumed the remains of two soldiers in the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) during its demining operation this week, the South's defence ministry said on Thursday. South Korea has dug up the remains of two soldiers it believes were killed during the Korean war. The country's defense ministry says the exhumations happened in the 'Demilitarized Zone' - or DMZ - during a demining operation.Separating North and South Korea, the barrier is one of the world's most heavily fortified frontiers. The conflict between the two sides ran from 1950 - 1953.It's thought the bodies of more than 10,000 soldiers are still in the zone, including UN fighters. The team also unearthed a military identification tag typical of a South Korean soldier.The two Koreas have been removing mines in the DMZ to make it safe before a joint project to exhume war remains next year. It's part of a military agreement signed by both sides after the third inter-Korean summit in Pyongyang last month.Isolated North Korea and democratic South Korea are still technically at war. That's because the 1950s conflict ended

Oct 28, 2018By Choi Won-suk
South Korea exhumes remains of soldiers in DMZ
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Sun, sea and microplastics: French Riviera hit by plastic pollution

French scientists believe that microplastics are now widespread in the Mediterranean sea, posing significant health, environmental and economic risks, according to a long-term study. The French Riviera attracts holidaymakers, stars - and microplastics. A long-term study by the French National Centre for Scientific Research has been sampling the waters off Villefranche-sur-Mer, near Nice.The scientists found the equivalent of 600,000 plastic pieces per square kilometre, with risks to human health and the environment.RESEARCHER OF SORBONNE UNIVERSITY, CNRS (NATIONAL CENTRE FOR SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH), INSTITUT DE LA MER, VILLEFRANCHE-SUR-MER, MARIA LUIZA PEDROTTI, SAYING:"These microplastics are a form of pollution that are nearly invisible, but their impact is significant because either they can enter the food chain and reach humans - meaning that the organisms will eat them...they serve as vectors for the spread of organisms."The researchers used manta trawl nets to sample the top 10cm of seawater at the surface. They filtered out the plastic fragments and measured the pieces using imag

Oct 25, 2018By Choi Won-suk
Sun, sea and microplastics: French Riviera hit by plastic pollution
News

New study finds microplastics in 90% of salt

Researchers from South Korea and Greenpeace East Asia have found that 90 percent of table salt sold around the world are contaminated with microplastics.After analyzing salt from 21 countries in Europe, Asia, North and South America, and Africa, a new study published in Environmental Science and Technology found microplastics in 36 out of 39 brands.Microplastic density was highest among Asian brands, especially those from Indonesia. The only three salts free from plastic were those from Taiwan, China, and France.Researchers sampled three types of salts and found that sea salt had the highest microplastic levels, followed by lake salt, and then rock salt.With particles often less than 5 millimeters in size and many the same color as salt, and they are barely noticeable.The study estimates that the average adult consumes 2,000 microplastics a year through salt.Scientists have yet to determine how harmful microplastics are to our bodies, but so far, experiments on mice haven't exactly brought good news. (Next Animation via Reuters)

Oct 25, 2018By Choi Won-suk
New study finds microplastics in 90% of salt
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Migrants halted on bridge at Mexico border

Hundreds of Central American migrants remain camped on a bridge separating Guatemala and Mexico on Saturday, as efforts to halt a trek north by the caravan gathered pace under U.S. pressure. Hundreds of Central American migrants pressing north are in limbo Saturday. Camping out on a bridge at Mexico's southern border a day after meeting tear gas and riot police. Migrants bathed in the river Saturday as some took their chances at crossing illegally on makeshift rafts. Others hoped officials would have of heart.HONDURAN MIGRANT, SUSAN OLINTE, SAYING:"We're going to stay here all night, possibly tomorrow so that God touches the heart of the President so that he can give us permission to enter so we can get a good job.As the group bedded down Friday, US President Donald Trump touted his tough immigration stance to energize Republicans ahead of the midterms.US PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP SAYING:"You know the people come up and you listen to the fake news back there and you think their all (booo) You think they're all wonderful people, no I am serious. You think you got some wonderful

Oct 22, 2018By Choi Won-suk
Migrants halted on bridge at Mexico border
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ON THE SPOT - Itaewon Global Village Festival

This year's Itaewon Global Village Festival was held on Oct. 13-14. The first episode of 'ON THE SPOT' shows you a fun mix of Korean and foreign culture at this event, a must-go gathering for expats in Seoul. 

Oct 16, 2018
ON THE SPOT - Itaewon Global Village Festival
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France could help North Korea denuclearize

France is ready to help in North Korea's denuclearization efforts, but Pyongyang must first show some detailed commitments and real desire to dismantle its nuclear and ballistic arsenal, President Emmanuel Macron said on Monday (October 15).France, a nuclear power and permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, is not directly involved in talks between North Korea, South Korea and the United States to work towards the region's denuclearization.However, diplomats have said that given Paris' nuclear know-how it could play a role in the dismantling of nuclear warheads or receiving nuclear materials.North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and U.S. President Donald Trump pledged at a landmark summit in Singapore in June to work towards denuclearisation.On Brexit, Macron said he was going to speak to British Prime Minister Theresa May later on Monday in preparation for a European Summit, adding France was prepared for any outcome to Brexit negotiations. (Reuters)

Oct 16, 2018By Choi Won-suk
France could help North Korea denuclearize
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