torsdag 5 maj 2022

Thai Public Health Minister proposes to end "Thailand Pass" registration-but at first only for Thai returnees - TPN National News

Thai Public Health Minister proposes to end "Thailand Pass" registration-but at first only for Thai returnees

PHOTO: Prachachat

National –

Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul said today, May 5th, that he would propose the cancellation of the "Thailand Pass" registration initially for Thai returnees before possibly expanding it to foreigners in a further step.

The Minister stated also that the fatality rate of Covid-19 patients was declining. The bed occupancy rate was currently at about 20 percent, the infection rate found among international arrivals was at 0.001 percent, and the medicines and medical supplies were sufficient to treat COVID-19 patients.

He continued that if the general situation of Covid-19 Coronavirus was under control, preventive measures would be relaxed in the preparation for declaring Covid-19 as an endemic disease.

Moreover, Anutin planned to propose to the Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration (CCSA) to end the "Thailand Pass" registration initially only for Thai returnees before possibly later applying to foreign tourists.

When asked whether the emergency decree would be ended or extended, the Minister said that this decision was for Prime Minister Prayut Chan-O'Cha and the CCSA. But after the disease became endemic, Anutin said that the government would no longer need to implement the decree to control the Covid-19 anymore.




Omicron as severe as previous COVID variants, large study finds. May 5 (Reuters) – The Omicron variant of the SARS-CoV2 virus is intrinsically as severe as previous variants, unlike assumptions made in previous studies that it was more transmissible but less severe, a large study in the United States has found. | Thai PBS World / Reuters

Omicron as severe as previous COVID variants, large study finds

May 5 (Reuters) – The Omicron variant of the SARS-CoV2 virus is intrinsically as severe as previous variants, unlike assumptions made in previous studies that it was more transmissible but less severe, a large study in the United States has found.

"We found that the risks of hospitalization and mortality were nearly identical between periods," said four scientists who conducted the study based on records of 130,000 COVID-19 patients, referring to times in the past two years when different variants were dominant across the world.

The study, which is undergoing peer review at Nature Portfolio and was posted on Research Square on May 2, was adjusted for confounders including demographics, vaccination status, and the Charlson comorbidity index that predicts the risk of death within a year of hospitalization for patients with specific comorbid conditions.

The studies that assumed that the Omicron variant was less severe were conducted in various places including South Africa, Scotland, England, and Canada, said the scientists from Massachusetts General Hospital, Minerva University and Harvard Medical School.

They said their study could have several limitations, including the possibility that it underestimated the number of vaccinated patients in more recent COVID waves, and the total number of infections, because it excluded patients who performed at-home rapid tests.







Pattaya’s miniboom ignores the missing Chinese tourists. In pre-pandemic 2019, Chinese visitors amounted to almost a third of the country’s 40 million tourists. Steve Saxon, partner at travel specialists McKinsey and Company, summed up, “China has stopped issuing passports and any returning nationals have to spend up to three weeks in quarantine to try and stamp out the pesky virus.” He added that group travel had been outright banned by Beijing and wasn’t returning any time soon.- Pattaya Mail

Pattaya's miniboom ignores the missing Chinese tourists

The huge construction site on Thepprasit Road makes access to D'Luck Kaan theatre impossible for coaches.

Pattaya is finally shaking off its ghost city image as the tills ring merrily in the entertainment districts. But what's missing are the long lines of Chinese tourists following the "flag" and sporting cell phones and sun hats. In pre-pandemic 2019, Chinese visitors amounted to almost a third of the country's 40 million tourists. Steve Saxon, partner at travel specialists McKinsey and Company, summed up, "China has stopped issuing passports and any returning nationals have to spend up to three weeks in quarantine to try and stamp out the pesky virus." He added that group travel had been outright banned by Beijing and wasn't returning any time soon.

The Pattaya businesses still under lock and key are those dependent on the lost market. Thepprasit Road, the Chinese hub which houses hi-tech cabaret extravaganzas such as Kaan, Imagine 79 and the Colosseum, once entertained up to 1,200 tourists nightly crammed into dozens of huge coaches. The car parks were (and are) many times larger than the actual theatres. Now the abandoned area has an eerie silence as the empty spaces have been taken over by feral dogs and the occasional mobile shop selling fruit or second-hand shoes.

Oddly, City Hall has ensured that a Chinese revival is impossible in any case. Thepprasit Road (along with many other Pattaya thoroughfares) is largely dug up as it waits for a massive drainage and underground cable panacea labeled "short term pain for long term gain". However, work came to a halt last month and is now scheduled for completion sometime next year. Public anger has mounted as the area is now plagued daily by huge traffic jams and single-lane overcrowding which, of course, would make access by coaches impossible.

A spokesperson said there were many reasons for the delays: bad weather, late delivery of tractors, shortage of guest-worker laborers from Myanmar and budgetary issues created by the hiatus as Pattaya is in campaign mode for the election of a new mayor. For the time being, Chinese tourists will have to take selfies in their own land.

The Imagine 79 theatre is now an abandoned structure.

The enormous coach park at the Colosseum theatre has been empty for over two years.





Thailand aims to use soft power to attract up to 15 million quality visitors to Thailand this year. PRD

 
Thailand aims to use soft power to attract up to 15 million quality visitors to Thailand this year.
According to the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT), about 444,000 international travelers made their way to Thailand over the first three months of this year, generating over 34 billion baht in revenue.
Looking ahead to the May to September period, The TAT is hoping to attract at least 300,000 new quality tourists each month, eventually reaching 1 million monthly from October to December 2022.
TAT has had meetings and discussions with the private sector following the Government's decision to reopen, which aimed to determine how best to attract up to 15 million visitors this year.
The plan includes the promotion of Thai soft power through culinary delights, Thai cinema, fashion, and martial arts.  In addition, the TAT aims to take members of the private sector on more roadshows globally, with an emphasis on important markets.

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