fredag 7 januari 2022

69 provinces now "orange" zones with ban on alcohol sales at restaurants | Thaiger

69 provinces now "orange" zones with ban on alcohol sales at restaurants

Restrictions are tightening in a number of provinces. Thailand's Covid-19 task force revised its colour-coded zoning based on local infection rates and decided to classify 69 of Thailand's 77 provinces as "orange" zones under tight control to curb the spread of Covid-19. The new zoning goes into effect on Sunday.

The other provinces will remain classified as "blue" zone provinces, which are approved for pilot tourism programmes, are remaining the same. Blue zones include Bangkok, Chon Buri, Kanchanaburi, Krabi, Nonthaburi, Pathum Thani, Phang Nga, and Phuket.

Alcohol sales at restaurants in "orange" zones are prohibited while in "blue" zones restaurants can serve booze until 9pm each night. To serve alcohol, those "blue" zone restaurants must abide by the government's "Covid Free Settings" measures and be certified under SHA+ standards.

69 provinces now "orange" zones with ban on alcohol sales at restaurants | News by Thaiger



BREAKING !!! PBS World


 BREAKING: #Thailand's CCSA today (Friday) adjusted #COVID19 zoning, maintaining the same measures in 8 "sandbox" provinces, while the remaining 69 provinces will be in the "orange" or "controlled" zone from Sunday Jan 9. Eateries in #Thailand's "sandbox" areas can still serve alcohol until 9pm. Pubs and bars are to remain closed beyond the initially planned reopening on Jan 16, but if they open as "eateries" they can serve alcohol. Applications for #Thailand Pass, for entry under the "Test and Go" scheme, will remain suspended until further notice. Those with passes already granted can enter the country till Jan 15. Entry ban from 8 African countries to be lifted from Jan 11. #ThailandNews

IDAG ÄR BANGSAEN MED BLAND DETALJINFO. The Chonburi Department of Public Health announced 1,342 new and confirmed cases of Covid-19 today with no new deaths, January 7th, 2022. Pattaya News

Chonburi, led by Banglamung with 712, announces 1,342 new and confirmed cases of Covid-19 and no new deaths

Highlights:

  • 1,342 new confirmed cases of Covid-19 in Chonburi today

  • 134 people recovered and were released from medical care

  • No new deaths

The Chonburi Department of Public Health announced 1,342 new and confirmed cases of Covid-19 today with no new deaths, January 7th, 2022.

This makes a total of 117,246 cases of Covid-19 in the current round of infections, with 5,376 people still under medical care/supervision, and with a total of 794 recorded deaths in Chonburi since the start of this recent round of infections in early April.

Additionally, 134 people were also released and recovered yesterday in Chonburi. 111,076 people in total have now been released from medical care and recovered in Chonburi since this current wave of Covid-19 began.

Two people were listed as being in serious condition in Chonburi currently, either on a ventilator or pneumonia. Both of them have completed double doses of Covid -19 vaccine. According to the Chonburi Department of Public Health, the vast majority of recent cases are mild or asymptomatic.

In total, 1,916,155 people in Pattaya and Chonburi have received their first dose of a Covid -19 vaccine which is 82.27 percent of the total Chonburi population. Of those, 298,663 have received their first dose and are what the Thai government calls 608 groups (elders, have chronic health problems, and pregnant) which is 80.73 percent of those in these risk groups in Chonburi.

The district-level new cases were as follows today:

Mueang Chonburi 207, Si Racha 265, Banglamung (Pattaya) 712, Panat Nikhom 12, Sattahip 49 (in navy area 4), Ban Bueng 11, Phan Thong 28, Bor Thong 4, Ko Chan 1, Nong Yai 5, and 48 people transferred from other provinces for medical care.

The details on the cases are as follows:

  1. Work and stayed in Rayong, transferred from other provinces for medical care, 40 cases
  2. Active case finding at restaurants that sell alcohol in Pattaya and Banglamung, 103 cases
  3. Cluster, Ang Thong Building company in Banglamung, 4 cases
  4. Active case finding at restaurants that sell alcohol in Bang Saen and Wonnapa Beach in Mueang Chonburi, 54 cases
  5. Active case finding in students at Burapha University in Mueang Chonburi (staffers and customers at restaurants that sell alcohol), 27 cases
  6. Cluster, LHAO HENG (restaurant selling alcohol) in Mueang Chonburi, 7 cases
  7. Cluster, Mino company in Mueang Chonburi, 4 cases
  8. Cluster, Cool Club in Si Racha, 12 cases
  9. Cluster students at Kasetsart University in Si Racha, 12 cases
  10. Cluster, Kerry Siam Seaport company in Si Racha, 3 cases
  11. Risky occupations meeting many people, 40 cases
  12. 34 medical personnel
  13. Back from other provinces in
  • Bangkok, 8 cases
  • Ubon Thani, 5 cases
  • Chiang Mai, 4 cases
  • Khon Kaen, 3 cases
  • Sakhon Nakhon, 3 cases
  • Kalasin, 2 cases
  • Nakhon Si Thammarat, 1 case
  • Chanthaburi, 1 case
  • Chumphon, 1 case
  • Chiang Rai, 1 case
  • Trat, 1 case
  • Nakhon Nayok, 1 case
  • Nakhon Ratchasima, 1 case
  • Bueng Kan, 1 case
  • Buriram, 1 case
  • Phuket, 1 case
  • Mahasarakham, 1 case
  • Roi-Et, 1 case
  • Sisaket, 1 case
  • Songkhla, 1 case
  • Surin, 1 case
  • Nong Khai, 1 case

14. Close contacts from previously confirmed cases in families – 175 cases, in workplaces – 172 cases, close personal contacts – 57 cases, and joined a party – 168 cases

15. Close contacts of a confirmed patient (under investigation), 63 cases

16. 327 cases close contacts of a confirmed patient (under investigation) 


Calling Omicron 'mild' a mistake, says WHO. The Omicron variant of Covid-19 is killing people across the globe and should not be dismissed as mild, the World Health Organization warned on Thursday. Bangkok Post

Calling Omicron 'mild' a mistake, says WHO
WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus says the Omicron variant is killing people and overwhelming hospitals.
WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus says the Omicron variant is killing people and overwhelming hospitals.

GENEVA: The Omicron variant of Covid-19 is killing people across the globe and should not be dismissed as mild, the World Health Organization warned on Thursday.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the record numbers of people catching the new variant -- which is rapidly out-competing the previously-dominant Delta variant in many countries -- meant hospitals were being overwhelmed.

"While Omicron does appear to be less severe compared to Delta, especially in those vaccinated, it does not mean it should be categorised as mild," Tedros told a press conference.

"Just like previous variants, Omicron is hospitalising people and it is killing people," he explained.

"In fact, the tsunami of cases is so huge and quick, that it is overwhelming health systems around the world."

Just under 9.5 million new Covid-19 cases were reported to the WHO last week -- a record, up 71 percent on the week before.

But even this was an underestimate, Tedros said, as it did not reflect the backlog of testing around the Christmas-New Year holidays, positive self-tests not registered, and overburdened surveillance systems missing cases.

Targets falling short -

Tedros used his first speech of 2022 to slam the way rich nations hogged available vaccine doses last year, saying it had created the perfect breeding ground for the emergence of virus variants.

He therefore urged the world to share out vaccine doses more fairly in 2022, to end the "death and destruction" of Covid-19.

Tedros wanted every country to have 10 percent of their population vaccinated by the end of September 2021 and 40 percent by the end of December.

Ninety-two of the WHO's 194 member states missed the target set for the end of 2021 -- indeed 36 of them had not even jabbed the first 10 percent, largely due to being unable to access doses.

Tedros wants 70 percent jabbed in every country by mid-2022.

On the current pace of vaccine roll-out, 109 countries will miss that target.

"Vaccine inequity is a killer of people and jobs and it undermines a global economic recovery," said Tedros.

"Booster after booster in a small number of countries will not end a pandemic while billions remain completely unprotected."

Omicron not the end -

The WHO's Covid-19 technical lead Maria Van Kerkhove said it was "very unlikely" that Omicron would be the last variant of concern before the pandemic is over.

In facing the more transmissible Omicron variant, Van Kerkhove urged people to step up the measures they were already taking to protect themselves against the virus.

"Do everything that we have been advising better, more comprehensively, more purposefully," she said.

"We need people to hang in there and really fight."

Van Kerkhove added that she was stunned by how sloppily some people were wearing facemasks.

"It needs to cover your nose and mouth... wearing a mask below your chin is useless," she said.

Looking ahead to this year, Bruce Aylward, the WHO's frontman on accessing coronavirus tools, added that there was "no need to finish 2022 in a pandemic".

But WHO emergencies director Michael Ryan said that without vaccine equity, "we will be sitting here at the end of 2022 having somewhat the same conversation, which, in itself, would be a great tragedy".





France detects new Covid variant "IHU," believed to be highly transmissible | A WHO incident manager on Covid-19, Abdi Mahamud, told the media at a news conference in Geneva on Tuesday that the variant had been on the radar to monitor. “That virus had a lot of chances to pick up.” Thaiger

France detects new Covid variant "IHU," believed to be highly transmissible

While the world is grappling with a continuous spike in Covid-19 cases due to the Omicron variant, scientists in France have discovered a new variant. The newly-discovered variant, called B.1.640.2, was found in 12 patients near Marseille and features 46 mutations, making it vaccine-resistant and contagious.

Also known as "IHU," the strain was detected by scholars at the IHU Mediterranee Infection on December 10 last year, with the first patient being related to travelling to Cameroon in Central Africa and having been vaccinated.

Lab results show that the N501Y mutation, which was initially detected in the Alpha variation, has been found in the new virus and is thought to make it more transmissible. It could be more vaccine-resistant as scientists also found the E484K mutation in the new IHU variant.

Since it was initially identified in November, it hasn't posed much of a threat, according to the World Health Organisation.

A WHO incident manager on Covid-19, Abdi Mahamud, told the media at a news conference in Geneva on Tuesday that the variant had been on the radar to monitor.

"That virus had a lot of chances to pick up."

SOURCE: Time | First Post






🔴 #COVID19 update on Friday: ⬆️ 7,526 new cases ⬆️ 19 deaths ⬆️ 42,580 in care. Richard Barrow




Phuket has experienced major problems with its sandbox scheme while the Covid-19 infection rate there keeps rising. Deputy provincial governor Pichate Panaphong said Phuket identified four problems after it opened as a pioneer province to welcome tourists under the Phuket Sandbox scheme. Bangkok Post

Phuket tweaks sandbox rules
A man is tested as a mandatory measure for arriving passengers to prevent the spread of the coronavirus disease at Phuket airport on Nov 29, 2021. (Reuters photo)
A man is tested as a mandatory measure for arriving passengers to prevent the spread of the coronavirus disease at Phuket airport on Nov 29, 2021. (Reuters photo)

Phuket has experienced major problems with its sandbox scheme while the Covid-19 infection rate there keeps rising.

Deputy provincial governor Pichate Panaphong said Phuket identified four problems after it opened as a pioneer province to welcome tourists under the Phuket Sandbox scheme.

The first was the delay in approving the Thailand Pass among foreign tourists.

He said the process should be a one-stop service and operate 24 hours. There should be a round-the-clock call centre to answer foreigners' inquires. He had submitted the idea to the Interior Ministry asking them to consult the Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration (CCSA).

The next issue was a shortage of RT-PCR test facilities. Labs in both the public and private sectors were not enough to handle second RT-PCR tests. Since Jan 4, the province has added five more mobile lab vehicles. It expects to handle up to 1,200 people per day.

Thirdly, hospital-cum-hotels (hospitels) and hotel isolation facilities were insufficient to cater to foreign patients with mild symptoms, he said.

He had asked the Phuket Public Health Administration to work with Vachira Phuket Hospital and the Thai Hotels Association (southern chapter) to open more hospitels or renovate some of their venues into hotel isolation facilities.

He said Vachira Phuket Hospital will join hands with more hotels to offer 200 rooms as hospital facilities.

Lastly, many international tourists travel with health insurance but their insurance policy does not cover medical costs for mild Covid-19 symptoms. He suggested the CCSA impose a regulation for international arrivals to also purchase local health insurance.

Governor Narong Woonsiw said the problems found during the first version of the Phuket Sandbox will lead to improvements. He will introduce "Phuket Sandbox Version 2" soon to ensure tourists enjoy safe and smooth travel during their stay, he said. In addition, Phuket will also protect its residents by introducing a booster shot.

The public health office has to ensure that facilities will be sufficient for locals who are infected and have mild symptoms. Big cleaning activities in public places will be held regularly.

"Currently, the local economy is doing well due to the increasing number of tourists. I want residents, business operators and all stakeholders to keep following Covid-19 measures. If we can do that, we will get through this crisis together," the governor said.

As of Jan 5, Phuket had reported 283 Covid-19 cases in total comprising 227 new local infections, 46 sandbox cases and 10 infections from the Test & Go programme.