01950nam a22001697a 4500999001900000008004100019100002500060245005800085260004700143300003800190520123800228650011201466773004601578906003601624942000701660952011301667 c517755d517755210727b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aYou, Jongeun 927978 aLessons from south Korea’s Covid-19 policy response aAmerican Review of Public Administration  a50(6-7), Aug-Oct, 2020: p.801-808 aIn responding to the Covid-19 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic, some government policies have been more effective in containing, suppressing, and mitigating the disease than others. Government leaders and public administrators can learn from other countries and adapt these lessons to their crisis management and public health systems. South Korea has emerged as a model to emulate in fighting the pandemic. While South Korea endured devastating early outbreaks, the country flattened the coronavirus curve without paralyzing the national health and economic systems. The author reviews South Korea’s public health policy approaches and the embedded context, by using documents and materials written in Korean and English, to learn how the country managed coronavirus from January through April 2020. The critical factors in South Korea’s public health administration and management that led to success include national infectious disease plans, collaboration with the private sector, stringent contact tracing, an adaptive health care system, and government-driven communication. This article also proposes some key aspects to be considered to transfer lessons from country-level responses in South Korea to other contexts. – Reproduced  aPandemic crisis management, Infectious disease, Emergency management, Public administration response925889 aAmerican Review of Public Administration  aCRISIS MANAGEMENT - SOUTH KOREA cAR 00102ddc40709391822aIIPAbIIPAd2021-07-27h50(6-7), Aug-Oct, 2020: p.801-808pAR125004r2021-07-27yAR