Sunday, May 24, 2026

The $1 Billion Unification Scam: South Korea Wants To Use Your Taxes To Fund Border Research

The South Korean government plans to amend the Inter-Korean Cooperation Fund Act to enhance its flexibility and effectiveness amid strained relations.

North Korea Responds Forcefully to U.S. and Allies Over Military Cooperation with Russia

North Korea rebuffs international condemnation over military ties with Russia, claiming it threatens sovereignty and global peace.

Coupang Becomes A Trade Flashpoint as the United States Pressures Alarms Korean Lawmakers

The U.S. is using Coupang as leverage against South Korea, raising concerns in the National Assembly about trade implications.

2025 Healthcare Survey: How Many Koreans Skip Medical Visits Due to Costs?

Health2025 Healthcare Survey: How Many Koreans Skip Medical Visits Due to Costs?
Courtesy of News1
Courtesy of News1

A new survey finds that financial barriers play a minimal role in keeping people away from medical care, with just 2% of respondents reporting they skipped treatment due to cost.

The survey, conducted among 14,922 individuals across 7,058 households from July 14 to Sept. 19 last year, found that 85.6% used outpatient services within the year, while 4.2% experienced hospitalization. About 13.6% did not visit any healthcare facility during the period.

Women reported higher outpatient usage than men — 88.8% compared to 82.4%.

Age was a strong predictor of healthcare use. Adults 60 and older led all groups at 94.4%, followed by those in their 50s at 88.5%, their 40s at 83.5%, and their 30s at 78.8%.

Education level also tracked with utilization, though in the opposite direction. Those with elementary-level education or less reported the highest usage rate at 93.6%, compared to 87.6% for secondary education and 82.6% for those with higher education. Researchers noted the pattern may partly reflect the older demographic profile of lower-education groups rather than education alone driving the difference.

Among occupational categories, stay-at-home parents posted the highest outpatient usage rate at 92.9%, followed by the self-employed and business owners at 89.4% and the unemployed at 89.2%. Wage workers reported the lowest rate at 83.6%.

Courtesy of News1
Courtesy of News1

The average outpatient consultation lasted nine minutes, though that figure includes dental visits, which typically run longer. Most respondents — 70.2% — reported their actual time with a doctor fell between four and 10 minutes.

Patient satisfaction was broadly high. Among outpatient visitors, 93.7% said they felt comfortable during their appointments, and 90.4% expressed satisfaction with their treatment outcomes. Hospitalized patients reported even stronger results, with 95.1% satisfied overall and 89.7% saying they achieved the expected treatment results.

Financial barriers remained a marginal concern. Just 1.7% of respondents said they avoided a healthcare provider due to cost, 1.9% had gone without treatment they needed, and 2.2% had skipped necessary tests — all relatively rare occurrences across the survey population.

Check Out Our Content

Check Out Other Tags:

Most Popular Articles