lördag 2 januari 2021

Thailand continuing work to radically boost up vaccine implementation timeline - Pattaya News

Thailand continuing work to radically boost up vaccine implementation timeline

Bangkok, Thailand-

The Spokesperson for the Center for Covid-19 Situation Administration, Dr. Taweesin Visanuyothin, spoke with the press today and acknowledged that the timetable for securing more vaccines for Thailand was moving forward.

This comes after a second cluster of infections around the country has grown, as well as significant pushback from the hospitality and tourism industry in regards to previously starting to vaccinate Thailand as late as June of this year, which would mean border restrictions likely not being relaxed until the third or fourth quarter of the year. Thailand currently restricts foreign tourists due to the Covid-19 pandemic without going through a fourteen day quarantine and other paperwork and tests.

We reported last night that Anutin Charnvirakul, the Public Health Minister, had secured two million more doses to arrive as early as February. You can read about that here.

Dr. Taweesin also said that Thailand is/has contacted Astrazeneca to purchase another 26 million doses of Covid-19 vaccines, bringing Thailand's total to 52 million doses from that company.

Anutin Charnvirakul has also stated that the first two million doses of the Covid-19 vaccine will go to medical workers and village health volunteers. Thailand is aiming to be able to vaccinate at least half of their population this year with a focus on those who are at risk and vulnerable after health care workers.

Finally, Dr. Taweesin said this is only part of the overall plan to obtain more vaccines and speed up the process. This includes Thailand producing their own vaccine, likely later this year and allowing private hospitals to import vaccines at their choice if they are certified by the Food and Drug Administration by Thailand. The overall plan is to quickly expediate the plan with getting vaccinations rolling out throughout Thailand.



Bangkok Shuts Bars, Bans Alcohol in Restaurants; Pathum Thani Announces Shutdown - Bangkok Herald

Bangkok Shuts Bars, Bans Alcohol in Restaurants; Pathum Thani Announces Shutdown
Bangkok officials presented shutdown orders to pub and bar owners Friday night.
Bangkok officials presented shutdown orders to pub and bar owners Friday night.

Bangkok City Hall late Friday expanded its list of businesses told to close to stem the tide of Thailand's coronavirus second wave, banning alcohol from restaurants and closing any pub not serving food.

The amended dictate came hours after the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration indefinitely shut down, effective at 12:01 a.m. Saturday, amusement and water parks, playgrounds and children's play equipment, game centers, snooker and billiard halls, amulet shops, horse0 and motor-racing tracks, animal-fighting venues; tattoo parlors, childcare centers, daily elderly-care centers, martial arts schools, boxing rings, "soapy" massage parlors, banquet halls, flea markets, and gyms must close indefinitely.

The BMA also extended its initial closure of 437 schools and 292 child care centers under its jurisdiction from the original Jan. 17 until "indefinitely". The measure does not cover private schools.

Restaurants, which started Friday with only hours restrictions, saw their ability to serve alcohol cut in the evening and, by mid-day Saturday, may have their dining rooms shut down as well. The CCSA will decide whether to accept the Public Health Ministry's restaurants in high-risk areas revert to takeout and delivery only.

Alcohol sales are not banned – yet – and can still be purchased in convenience stores and supermarkets and consumed at home. Customers with wholesale business accounts also can still order alcohol online for delivery after direct-to-consumer online sales were banned Dec. 7.

City hall stopped, at least for now, a full shutdown of the city. Markets, shopping malls and standalone retailers, hairdressers, nail salons, beauty clinics, golf courses and driving ranges, sports stadiums, parks, exercise grounds, sporting fields, pet grooming stores, swimming pools, gardens, museums, theaters, zoos and animal shows still will operate normally under strict disease-control measures including required mask use.

How long those remain open is anyone's guess, but the outlook as Thailand begins 2021 is bleak. The Center for Covid-19 Situation Administration reported 279 new infections in Thailand on Friday, including 20 in Bangkok, and 723 in the past three days.

After the CCSA's daily briefing, Nonthaburi added 25 more infections to its growing total while Pathum Thani's governors also closed, until at least Jan. 15, pubs, bars and entertainment venues, restaurants, schools, indoor sports centers, gyms, massage and health, game shops and Internet cafes, amusement parks, swimming pools, tattooing, bowling alleys, fishing ponds and other high-risk establishments.

In Rayong, where 37 new cases were reported Friday, coronavirus cases are overwhelming hospitals, forcing provincial officials to convert a local quarantine facility into a 70-bed field hospital while, in Chonburi, where 51 new cases were confirmed, preparations are under way to turn a resort and a naval base in Sattahip District into field hospitals.

Buriram late Friday joined Khon Kaen in imposing two-week quarantines on those traveling to the Issan province from 11 hot zones: Samut Sakhon, Rayong, Chonburi, Bangkok, Nakhon Pathom, Samut Prakan, Trat, Samut Songkhram, Nonthaburi, Pathum Thani and Chanthaburi.

Rayong opens field hospitals for COVID-19 patients as hospital overwhelmed - PBS World

Rayong opens field hospitals for COVID-19 patients as hospital overwhelmed

A local quarantine facility in Rayong has been turned into a 70-bed field hospital and preparations are under way to turn a resort and a naval base in Sattahip district of Chon Buri into field hospitals, to accommodate new COVID-19 patients, after the Rayong provincial hospital ran out of in-patient beds, said Rayong's Governor Charnna Iamsaeng today (Friday).

He asked people in Wang Chan district not to panic over the transfer of people residing at a local quarantine facility, in Wai Gong, to the Wang Chan golf course, assuring that they are not infected, but are just being kept under observation while the quarantine facility is used as a field hospital.

37 new COVID-19 cases were recorded today in Rayong, increasing infections related to an illegal gambling den to 316, said the governor.

Referring to the arrests of several gamblers, at an illegal cock-fighting ring in Pluak Daeng district and hi-low gamblers in Klaeng district, the governor urged people in the province to cooperate in the fight against the contagion by stopping illegal gambling, saying that, if they don't, they cannot complain if they are banned from entering other provinces.

The Rayong provincial hospital today asked for a mini bus, from the Muang District's municipal administration, to transfer a group of COVID-19 patients to the field hospital in Wai Gong in Ban Khai district.


NO - GO ZONES - Bangkok Post



Closures across the board / Do not expect this to end soon, says CCSA - Bangkok Post

Closures across the board

Do not expect this to end soon, says CCSA

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Entertainment venues are among a wide range of establishments that have been ordered to shut from midnight in the wake of the latest Covid-19 outbreak.

The tightening of measures by the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) was announced on Friday as two more Covid-19 deaths were reported, lifting the total to 63.

Speaking after an urgent meeting of the Bangkok communicable disease committee, BMA spokesman Pongsakorn Kwanmuang said new infection clusters had been found and linked to entertainment venues and other premises.

The committee had therefore decided to order many more closures with immediate effect -- and with no end date.

The places to be shut are entertainment venues, water parks, amusement parks, playgrounds, places where children play at markets, flea markets, floating markets, snooker and billiard halls, arcade game premises, game shops, internet shops, cockfighting rings and cockfighting training rings.

Other establishments are nurseries, elderly nursing homes (except those which already offer overnight stays); martial arts schools, gyms, horse racing tracks, public baths, bath-saunas-massage parlours, sports fields, banquet halls and similar places, bull-fighting rings, fighting-fish rings or similar places, amulet markets or centres, pre-school nurseries, any place providing skin-piercing services, plus all buildings at schools, tutorial schools and educational institutions.

Many of these places, including nurseries and some schools, had already been shut but the new order supercedes all previous ones, said Pol Capt Pongsakorn.

One issue yet to resolved is whether to limit eateries to provide takeaway orders only.

"We will discuss it with the CCSA on Jan 2," the officer added.

"Since several people in Greater Bangkok commute to work in the capital, such a measure should be imposed in adjacent provinces as well."

If approved, he said, the mandatory food takeaway order may not come into effect anyway until Monday, giving operators some time over the weekend to prepare.

Pol Capt Pongsakorn then turned to Bangkok's designation of restrictions, which for the most part are under the second highest level of control.

Three districts, however, have now been designated as red zones with maximum control: Nong Khaem, Bang Phlat and Bang Khunthian.

In these areas, district office directors can impose measures to curb the spread of the infection as they see fit.

The BMA's education department announced yesterday it was widening its closure order to all schools under its supervision until Jan 17 to stem the coronavirus outbreak.

Earlier, the BMA had only closed 14 schools in Bang Khunthian, Bang Bon and Nong Khaem districts from Dec 21 until tomorrow.

The districts are adjacent to Samut Sakhon, the epicentre of the current outbreak.

Its latest decision on Friday to shut all 437 schools in all districts underlines the seriousness of the outbreak in Bangkok.

This was reflected in the CCSA's latest figures -- two more Covid-19 deaths and 279 new infections -- amid worries the trend will continue as more people have been travelling during the New Year holiday.

The new fatalities were a man, 44, who had visited a restaurant in Bangkok on Dec 20 and a 70-year-old man who illegally entered from Myanmar into Mae Sot district, Tak on Nov 29.

Of the new cases, 257 were spread over 53 provinces.

They included those linked to the clusters in Samut Sakhon (3), Rayong (2) and Chon Buri (1).

CCSA spokesman Taweesilp Visanuyothin warned the situation remained serious and it could take some time for authorities to bring it under control.

"Do not expect the spread to end today or tomorrow," he said, adding he expected the situation to ease in mid-February.

Meanwhile, the wife of infected Samut Sakhon governor Veerasak Vichitsaengsri is also reportedly being treated for Covid-19.




fredag 1 januari 2021

18,000 Cases a Day: National Lockdown Looms as Thailand’s Second Wave Spread to 53 Provinces - Bangkok Herald

18,000 Cases a Day: National Lockdown Looms as Thailand's Second Wave Spread to 53 Provinces

Three models developed by the CCSA show how Thailand's current second-wave can be flattened. The worst-case scenario sees 18,000 new cases a day by Jan. 14.
Three models developed by the CCSA show how Thailand's current second-wave can be flattened. The worst-case scenario sees 18,000 new cases a day by Jan. 14.

Staring down the prospect of 18,000 coronavirus cases a day, Thailand quickly is moving back toward full lockdown, despite assertions to the contrary from its prime minister.

The Center for Covid-19 Situation Administration reported 279 more confirmed cases and two deaths on Friday, 273 of which were transmitted locally. That followed 194 cases on Thursday and 250 on Wednesday. Since the first second-wave case was reported in Samut Sakhon, Thailand has added more than 2,700 cases and three deaths, an increase of 60 percent since the start of the pandemic.

Total cases stood at 7,163 and deaths at 63 today.

While the outbreak began in the Central Shrimp Market in Samut Sakhon, it has moved on from there. Only 16 migrant laborers tested positive on Friday. The overwhelming majority of cases now involved Thais spread the virus to other Thais, sometimes in illegal casinos, sometimes by simply refusing to take the new outbreak seriously.

The Thai patients reported today include 90 in Samut Sakhon, 51 in Chonburi, 37 in Rayong, 29 in Chanthaburi, 20 in Bangkok, 13 in Samut Prakan, seven in Trat, two in each Pathum Thani and Sa Kaeo, and one in each Nakhon Si Thammarat, Lamphun, Surin, Nakhon Pathum, Ubon Ratchathani and Chachoengsao.

The 16 infected migrant workers include 15 in Samut Sakhon and one in Ang Thong. There were also six imported cases found in state quarantine.

The deaths, meanwhile, include a 44-year-old in Bangkok and a 70-year-old in Mae Sot. The Bangkok resident tested positive for Covid-19 only Wednesday.

Dr. Taweesin Visanuyothin, the CCSA's spokesman, said the Bangkok man had had visited a restaurant on Dec. 20 before developing a cough and runny nose after Christmas. He went to Charoenkrung Pracharak Hospital on Dec. 30 two days after developing a fever. He died that afternoon after being transferred to Chulalongkorn Hospital.

Meanwhile, the 70-year-old in Tak's Mae Sot district tested positive for the virus on Dec. 4 and died Thursday at 10 p.m. to pneumonia and respiratory failure.

While Samut Sakhon first said its shutdown order would last through Jan. 3, and Bangkok said its first order closing bars and massage parlors was until Jan. 4, both have already been extended "indefinitely". The long-predicted and initially denied "second wave" has now washed across 53 provinces and is expected to cover the entire country by the middle of the month.

"Do not think this outbreak will end in one or two days," Taweesin warned Friday, following on comments from Thursday's news briefing.

"We must admit that this New Year is not the same. The infection rate, which is now showing a three-digit daily increase, must be brought down. Although there is no full lockdown yet, we must adjust in line with disease-control measures," he said then.

Fueled by New Year's holiday travel, the second-wave is project to gain momentum and, if left unmitigated, would see Thailand suffer 18,000 cases a day by Jan. 14, Taweesin said.

The CCSA has developed three models showing how Thailand can "flatten the curve", a phrase the kingdom had been fortunate not to have heard since July.

The first and worst – no mitigation efforts – will soar to the tall curve seen around the world (except in the U.S., which has never musted the resolve to bring its curve down).

In the second model, which forsees only minor efforts to control the virus, the middle of the month could see 4,000 cases a day.

The third model, which the government has already shown it's planning to adhere to, calls for enforcement of stringent measures and hopes for public cooperation, which is not the same given it was last spring, before pandemic fatigue set in.

It calls for facemask to be worn at all time outdoors and in public, regular hand-washing and shutdown measures that could reach the level of a new lockdown, with restrictions on movement between provinces and a night-time curfew.

The curve currently is sloping up 45 degrees, Taweesin said, and Thailand is headed to several thousand cases a day if more is not done.

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha reiterated in Pattaya on Wednesday there would be no national lockdown, but he gave provincial governors the power to lockdown their jurisdictions. But Prayut's ultra-conservative track record shows he has had little patience with any sort of outbreak and may soon do an about-face, Thai economy be damned.




Thailand bans eating and drinking on ALL flights - Bangkok Jack

Thailand bans eating and drinking on ALL flights

Passengers on domestic flights in Thailand will not be allowed food or drink on board in a bid to limit the spread of coronavirus.

Thai Smile cabin crew members wearing protective face masks 

"It is forbidden to eat and drink during flight operations," the Civil Aviation Authority of Thailand (EKAT) warned airlines.

Domestic carriers are told: "In case of emergency, crew may consider providing drinking water to passengers, which is to be done in an area as far away from the other passengers as possible."

Airlines will also be prohibited from handing out newspapers and magazines, though the safety card will continue to be available.

The aviation authority said: "Currently, the Covid-19 epidemic is increasing in many areas.  "The government has set public health measures to raise the level of surveillance and preventive measures, which will be an important part of resolving the above situation quickly."

Thailand has recorded 6,700 cases since the coronavirus crisis began. That total corresponds to three hours of new cases in the UK in the most recent day's figures.




Things in Thailand you are WRONG about -Bangkok Jack



Things in Thailand you are WRONG about

#Thailand calls itself the #LandofSmiles, but it can also be the land of misunderstanding, misconception, fake and fraud.

Whilst it is true that not everybody in Thailand is determined to scam and rob you. It is also not true that everything is cheap, friendly and relaxed.

In fact, as a wise man once said, the only way to tell if it is getting cold in Thailand, is when the Thais have their hands in their own pockets.

Here are a few other things you are wrong about in Thailand;

Giving money to street kids is helping them

It is very tempting to give money to grubby street urchins and beggars, especially young kids selling flowers or candy. But it is always a bad idea.

Usually they are victims of human trafficking and are not the poor offspring of the scruffy, pleading adult who has them firmly by the neck.

They are often imported from Cambodia, Laos or even northern Thailand, to roam the southern cities pleading for cash from the caring tourist.

They don't see this cash, or the benefits of it. They are forced to hand it over to their 'Fagin' as soon as you are out of sight.

That's if they are lucky. Often they have the crap beaten out of them by older, stronger street boys and the money is stolen anyway. Which earns them another beating when Fagin returns.

Just don't do it, you are not helping anybody here except the traffickers.

Harsh as it sounds, without your small change the so-called industry dries up and kids around South East Asia will stop going missing.


The ice will kill you

People in Thailand do not drink the tap water. And nor do they make ice with it. So there is no need to spend your holiday drinking warm whiskey or gin.

Even if you are in a small, family shop house, they do not use tap water for their ice.

Because their own families use that same ice bucket too.

But if you are still concerned about your ice then make sure you only use the cubes with the holes in the middle.

These come from the ice making factory, and not the nearest freezer box. And the factory only use filtered water, obviously.

Otherwise everybody would be in hospital.


Everyone is out to scam you

Thailand has its scam artists. And when the latest Bangkok tuk-tuk driver has tried to get you into a suit shop or tells you the Grand Palace is closed, it certainly can feel like their sole intention is to rob you bandy.

But if you head out of the major tourist zones and arm yourself with some research on the most popular scams to avoid, (see below) you'll find most Thais are a incredibly decent people.

This is particularly true in less-traveled regions such as Isaan, in Thailand's northeast

There are even many decent people in towns like Pattaya and Phuket although, to be fair, they can be hard to find sometimes.

 

All solo male travelers are sex tourists

If you are a man and traveling alone, then don't be surprised if people assume you are only in Thailand for the cheap and easy sex.

Even if you stay away from the Entertainment Zones, you will still find yourself being propositioned by prostitutes and ladyboys.

But the truth is that western men come to Thailand for a wide range of reasons and most of those reasons have nothing to do with the hookers.

You can always buy your way out of trouble

It is often said that Thai police officers will accept a hand full of cash to look the other way.

But the Keystone Cops are always on the lookout for foreigners involved in the drugs trade.

It's not so easy to buy your way out of that sort of problem.

Mainly because the cops know the confiscated drugs are worth more to them than the cash you have in your pocket anyway.

Everybody knows drugs are illegal in Thailand and the penalties for any involvement at all are severe.

So, get involved in drugs and expect a very long time in the Bangkok Hilton, whilst somebody else enjoys the profits of all your hard work and risk.

As they say in Thailand – Som Nam Na – It's serves you right.

Just don't do it. Everybody is a police informer unless they are very well paid. (By you)

So you can buy you way out of trouble in Thailand, but that does depend on how much the trouble you are in is worth.


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