—different key practices, so I think we can come up with the most practical solutions to the problems that you are concerned about.
What are the impacts of this confinement, of staying at home, staying where you usually do not wish to spend the whole day? It has a lot of impacts on the mental and physical health of individuals and families, and it impacts a lot of people, so we are concerned about it. This is why we are also trying to have this sort of dynamic distancing, rather than complete social distancing, be granted. With dynamic distancing, you allow a certain level of relaxation when it comes to a small gathering, working at the office, spending some time in public places, and things like that.
Again, when you do relax, you certainly should be anticipating that this epidemic might be coming back. I think that's the trade-off that you need to be concerned about. This goes back to my earlier point.
We have a system in place to deal with it. When you know, the surge in cases isn't actually going to haunt you. If you are ready, you can handle it, and you can keep a sort of balance with economic revitalization and also the dynamic distancing.
You mentioned a second wave. What is meant by a second wave? I think people have different opinions. In my personal opinion—and this is also based on the collective wisdom that we are putting together in Canada and in Korea with the scholars and then best practitioners—I think a second wave, if it is coming, is also up to what we are going to do with it. It is not just coming as a second wave. It depends on our behaviour, our community actions, our government actions. If you have all these tools in place, you do not necessarily need to have a second wave in your country. That is my opinion.
I think that in the case of Korea—we have less than 50 cases per day these days—Korean people are very concerned about even a small number of cases every day. We try to keep this under 20, across Korea. That's the sort of the intelligence here in Korea, and I'm with them. I'm an American, actually, by legal status—