söndag 2 januari 2022

Chonburi overtakes Bangkok with highest daily Covid count – Thai Newsroom

Chonburi overtakes Bangkok with highest daily Covid count

THAILAND logged 3,112 Covid cases and 12 deaths over 24 hours to this morning (Jan. 2) with Chonburi overtaking Bangkok with the highest daily tally of 442 new cases compared to 366 at the latter, Matichon newspaper said.

The Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration (CCSA) said a breakdown of today's total cases shows 2,896 emerged among the general public, 65 were found through proactive search in communities, 149 foreign arrivals tested positive while two fell sick in prisons and detention centres.

This takes the cumulative confirmed total since 2020 to 2,229,558.

Another 2,921 patients were cured taking total recoveries since 2020 to 2,174,730 while 33,108 patients are undergoing treatment with 16,396 being in hospitals and 16,712 field hospitals and other facilities.

Today's 12 fatalities, all Thais, raised the death toll since 2020 to 21,720.

Altogether 104,472,167 doses of vaccines have been administered in 77 provinces with 51,301,610 having received one jab, 46,155,460 two jabs and  7,015,097 three of them.

The top ten provinces with the highest daily Covid count are as follows:

– Chonburi 442 cases, altogether 113,754;

– Bangkok 366 cases, altogether 440,970;

– Ubon Ratchathani 304 cases, altogether 23,093;

– Nakhon Si Thammarat 128 cases, altogether 48,116;

– Khon Kaen 100 cases, altogether 24,522;

– Samut Prakan 90 cases, altogether 132,467;

– Chiang Mai 85 cases, altogether 29,208;

– Phuket 84 cases, altogether 18,871;

– Udon Thani 659 cases, altogether 21,102;

– Rayong 57 cases, altogether 46,268.

CCSA added that of the 7,585 arrivals since the start of the New Year 4,532 came in by Test & Go procedure, with 95 testing positive; 2,551 by Sandbox scheme, with 31 infected while 502 were quarantined and 22 found to be infected.

Details of 10 countries of origin is as follows:

– 1,365 came from Russia, with 17 infected;

–  839 from Germany, 16 infected;

–  561 from France, 4 infected;

–  429 from the US, 30 infected;

–  402 from Sweden, 5 infected;

–  387 from the UK, 21 infected;

–  264 from Denmark, 3 infected;

–  251 from Finland, 1 infected;

–  210 from Kazakhstan, 3 infected;

– 185 from Singapore, 4 infected.






WHO warns of ‘tsunami of cases’ after New Year holidays - This coincides with Thai public health authorities’ warning that domestic case numbers are expected to surge to at least 10,000 per day following the New Year’s holiday period, in the best-case scenario. According to the health minister, there is already a tendency for the number of infected persons to rise and this will be compounded by the New Year’s festivities and holidaymaking, during which large crowds will gather. Pattaya Mail

WHO warns of 'tsunami of cases' after New Year holidays

WHO Director-General TedrosAdhanomGhebreyesus has expressed concern that COVID-19 infections resulting from both the Delta and Omicron variants of coronavirus would develop into a severe rise in infection numbers.

The worldwide number of COVID-19 infections over a 24-hour period has reached 1.8 million, breaking past records of global infections figures. The World Health Organization is now warning of a 'tsunami of cases' that could overwhelm public health systems throughout the world.

This coincides with Thai public health authorities' warning that domesticcase numbers are expected to surge to at least 10,000 per day following the New Year's holiday period, in the best-case scenario.

WHO Director-General TedrosAdhanomGhebreyesus has expressed concern that COVID-19 infections resulting from both the Delta and Omicron variants of coronavirus would develop into a severe rise in infection numbers. He likened such a scenario to a tsunami that would crash into currently strained public health infrastructures and already-exhausted healthcare personnel.

This would be especially true for infections resulting from the Omicron variant, which has already triggered overcapacity at some hospitals in the United States, which is currently among the countries most afflicted by Covid. The number of new infections has averaged 260,000 per day over the past 7 days, with experts saying the real number is likely much higher. Nonetheless, the number of infections did not correlate to the number of severe patients needing hospitalization, with the latter being much lower than the former.

Public Health Minister AnutinCharnvirakul has ordered all agencies under the Ministry of Public Health to closely monitor the spread of the Omicron variant of COVID-19, telling all units to guard against outbreaks and foster public awareness about important disease control measures.

According to the health minister, there is already a tendency for the number of infected persons to rise and this will be compounded by the New Year's festivities and holidaymaking, during which large crowds will gather. He added that increased public relations must be made to prompt people to take strict precautions so transmissions and deaths from Covid may be reduced.  (NNT)






Pattaya seafood vendors double prices for holiday - The New Year holiday means big business at Naklua’s seafood market, which responded as usual by jacking up prices to gouge holiday buyers. Prices on popular items doubled in some cases while others saw 100-baht increases at the Naklua Market which, before the holiday, had been visited by Pattaya consumer-protection officials whose warnings about price gouging were ignored. Pattaya Mail

Pattaya seafood vendors double prices for holiday

Traffic was heavy over the New Year holidays at Naklua Market.

The New Year holiday means big business at Naklua's seafood market, which responded as usual by jacking up prices to gouge holiday buyers.

Prices on popular items doubled in some cases while others saw 100-baht increases at the Naklua Market which, before the holiday, had been visited by Pattaya consumer-protection officials whose warnings about price gouging were ignored.



Nonetheless, people crowded in with horrific traffic and queues of shoppers picking up boxed sets for at-home meal preparation.

Vendor Atchariya Kerdkachondee claimed the higher prices were due to supply shortages during the holiday with crab, squid and shellfish in short supply. Banana prawns were either unavailable or sold at high wholesale prices.

She said customers "misunderstood" the reason for higher prices and complained that sellers were taking advantage of them. Atchariya said the wholesale prices were higher, too.

At Lan Po Market, crowds started filing in on Dec. 28 and the market is expected to continue humming until Jan. 2.

Queues of shoppers picked up boxed sets for at-home meals.

Prices on popular items doubled in some cases while others saw 100-baht increases at the Naklua Market.

Vendor Atchariya Kerdkachondee said higher retail prices were due to supply shortages and higher wholesale prices.










Phuket marks 85 new COVID cases, no new deaths. Omicron cases now hitting the daily infections record... Phuket News

Phuket marks 85 new COVID cases, no new deaths
Image: PPHO

PHUKET: The latest Phuket Provincial Public Health Office (PPHO) daily COVID situation report has marked 85 new local infections confirmed across the island yesterday (Jan 1), bringing the total number of people recognised as infected with COVID-19 in Phuket since Apr 3 to 19,924.

The PPHO report for Jan 1, marked as accurate as of 8pm last night, was posted online at 12:47am.

The report marked 22 new infections among Sandbox tourist arrivals and 18 new infections among Test & Go tourists, but no new infections among other international arrivals.

The report marked no new deaths attributed to COVID-19, leaving the total number of deaths in Phuket attributed to COVID-19 since Apr 3 at 143.

Of note, after 55 COVID deaths in September, 44 deaths in October and 18 deaths in November, officials marked six COVID deaths in Phuket in December.

Meanwhile, the 85 new local infections reported bring the total number of new local infections reported on the island in the past seven days to 377, as follows:

  • Dec 26 - 38 new cases
  • Dec 27 - 31 new cases
  • Dec 28 - 30 new cases
  • Dec 29 - 43 new cases
  • Dec 30 - 86 new cases
  • Dec 31 - 64 new cases
  • Jan 1 - 85 new cases

The report marked 22 people infected with COVID-19 in other provinces before entering Phuket, as well as 39 returning from other countries and testing positive, and 42 COVID patients brought back to Phuket under the "Bring Phuket people home" policy since Apr 3.

The report also marked 392 Phuket Sandbox arrivals who have tested positive for the virus after landing on the island since July 1, and 240 Test & Go tourists who have tested positive since Nov 1.

CBRE Phuket

According to the PPHO COVID situation report, 612 people were under medical care or supervision, 56 more than the 556 reported yesterday.

The report also marked 19,313 people in total being discharged from medical care for COVID infection since Apr 3 ‒ 72 more than the 19,241 reported yesterday.

The report recorded 10 people suspected of being infected with COVID-19 after testing positive by antigen test kit (ATK), while the total number of people reported as currently being held at 'COVID-19 Care Centers' across the island decreased from 37 to 26.

According to the report for Jan 1, there are zero 'Red' patients (zero change), 124 'Yellow' patients (+10) and 49 'Green' patients (+10) in care.

A further 271 people who tested positive for COVID-19 were at 'hospitels' (+69), and 37 were designated to recover in "Community Isolation" (zero change), which includes self-quarantining at home.

The report for Jan 1 also marked that of 1938 hospital beds in total available (-17), 481 were occupied (+89) 


Covid-19 Tests Now Required to Enter All Chonburi Restaurants - In a late-night attack on his province’s tourism and F&B industries, Chonburi’s governor issued an order mandating that customers of restaurants of all sizes produce a negative coronavirus test result before entering. Bangkok Herald

 Covid-19 Tests Now Required to Enter All Chonburi Restaurants
Will the brothels of Pattaya's Soi 6 that reopened his past week as
Will the brothels of Pattaya's Soi 6 that reopened his past week as "restaurants" offer STD checks with the Covid-19 tests? (Photo: Bangkok Herald)

In a late-night attack on his province's tourism and F&B industries, Chonburi's governor issued an order mandating that customers of restaurants of all sizes produce a negative coronavirus test result before entering.

The laughably unenforceable dictate from Gov. Pakarathorn Thienchai late Jan. 1 replaced a similarly absurd proclamation issued in the wee hours the same day that had spared smaller restaurants from the onerous unfunded mandate.

Both orders were issued out of panic over the coronavirus omicron variant, which has now made its way to Chonburi as the highly transmissible mutation sweep across Thailand to inevitably become the dominant strain in the country.

The original order had applied only from Dec. 31-Jan. 2 and required all staff, including entertainment performers, at restaurants – and the thousands of bars masquerading as restaurants – to be tested daily with rapid antigen kits.

Customers, however, would only have to produce proof of a negative coronavirus test from within the past 72 hours or take a test on-site before entering if the venue regularly served more than 100 people or "looked busy or congested" even without actually serving 100 people.

The new order, however, does away with the time limit – it's now in force until further notice – and requires all customers, regardless the size of the venue or the customer's vaccination status, to either take a test on-site or provide proof of a recent negative test.

Restaurant owners unable or unwilling to foot the testing bill or make customers wait 15 minutes outside for test results are given no other choice than to simply close down.

The order immediately drew the wrath of both operators and customers who pointed out impracticality of the mandate as well as the lack of required specificity.

"All food and beverage business? In malls? Food markets? Food carts? Smoothie stands? Coffee shops? This is really clear as mud," one commenter wrote on Facebook when the order was posted online. "Equivalent (to) a lockdown because who can afford to test everyday just to work and every 72 hours to dine or drink outside of their home?"

As always, there is law in Thailand there's what actually happens. The proof of the pudding will come tonight at the free-wheeling Tree Town Market on Pattaya's with its food stalls and nightclub, er, "restaurant" in the back, where the is no food but plenty of supposedly prohibited dancing, as well as the brothels on Soi 6 and Cheap Charlie 60-baht beer bars on Soi Buakhao and Soi 7.

With his extreme measure, Pakarathorn has stuck a shiv in the gut of every Chonburi restaurant owner, employee and entertainer. The province fought two months for the right for its venues to sell alcohol, which finally got them off the revenue mat.

Now, with one kneejerk sweep of the pen, the governor has put up a barrier to entry few customers will be willing to bear. Pakarathorn only needs to look at the thousands of empty seats at this weekend's Pattaya Countdown – where only 8% of 2,500 seats were filled on the first two nights – to learn that people won't put up with needless and pointless regulation.

Chonburi, at this point, has only a couple dozen documented omicron cases. And while daily case numbers have quadrupled to more than 200 over the past week, the increase was expected and easily handled by the province's hospitals.

And, as pointed out early in last year's outbreak, restaurants are an extremely minor contributor to the coronavirus wave. Tourism officials noted last year that only 3% of cases then were tied to restaurants. But now, as then, the food and beverage industry will take 100% of the hit.





🔴 Chonburi Public Health Office is reporting 442 ⬆️ new cases today which is a big jump compared to last month. Most new cases are in Chonburi City (33), Si Racha (32), and Bang Lamung/Pattaya (342). There are 2,736 patients in care. Richard Barrow