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Makan in Thailand


steveluv
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  On 4/28/2021 at 4:51 AM, PSP415 said:

Sad. RIP. 

These are from the more vulnerable group ie the elderly? They died in hospital's ICU or were unable to have access to medical help? 

Paiseh, I not familiar with the beautiful Thai strokes or language to understand. 

U and loved ones take care and stay safe too, Steve. 

Thanks for sharing. 

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The truth is people of all ages died due to the new and more powerful strain. Some die at home because they are waiting for hospital bed and this guy is one of them 

https://thethaiger.com/coronavirus/famous-thai-gamer-dies-from-covid-after-waiting-5-days-for-test

Thank you.

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https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Coronavirus/Thailand-s-new-COVID-wave-slams-hospitals-ignites-public-anger

Thailand's new COVID wave slams hospitals, ignites public anger
Malaysia restrictions prove futile; Philippine medical system short of beds

https%253A%252F%252Fs3-ap-northeast-1.am

Nurses tend to patients in a coronavirus intensive care unit at Vibhavadi Hospital in Bangkok on April 26.    © AFP/Jiji
MASAYUKI YUDA, Nikkei staff writerApril 28, 2021 13:59 JST

BANGKOK -- New waves of the coronavirus have prompted Southeast Asian countries to tighten restrictions on business and social activity as shortages of hospital beds stretch from Thailand to Malaysia to the Philippines.

Bangkok has closed more businesses including cinemas, gyms and parks for two weeks starting Monday, while a majority of the country's provinces have imposed a fine up to 20,000 baht ($635) for failing to wear a face mask in public. Malaysia has had new daily COVID-19 cases hover in the four digits for days despite emergency measures meant to control the spread. The Philippines' cumulative cases reached 1 million on Monday.

The new wave hits Thailand just as the country was looking to reopen its tourism-dependent economy and comes as variants of the coronavirus drive surges of infections in other Asian countries, notably India.

Thailand reported 2,179 new COVID-19 cases on Tuesday, bringing the total to 59,687 since the pandemic started. It was the fifth straight day Southeast Asia's second-largest economy recorded more than 2,000 daily cases. On Saturday, the kingdom logged 2,839 cases, a record high.

The epicenter of Thailand's third wave, which started in late March, has been Bangkok. The capital reported 993 cases on Tuesday. On Friday, the government warned that hospital beds in Bangkok could dry up in the next six to eight days if the situation is not brought under control.

Field hospitals have been prepared in Bangkok and surrounding provinces, but some patients have refused to be transferred there and opted to stay home, creating a mini cluster within their close circles of family and friends.

Thailand has recorded 163 COVID-19 deaths so far, but the government appears to be bracing for a higher death toll in coming days. The National Office of Buddhism ordered temples last week not to decline cremation services for people who die from the disease.

"We want to make sure that COVID-19 victims receive their last rites," a director of the agency said, according to local media.

To contain the new wave, Bangkok has imposed new business closures on top of the existing ones that have shuttered nightlife venues, such as bars and pubs, for a few weeks.

Shopping malls will operate for shorter hours from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., while convenience stores can open only from 5 a.m. to 10 p.m. Hair salons can provide cutting and washing services but will not allow dyeing and perming.

Roughly 50 out of 77 Thai provinces require people to wear a mask in public, enforced by a hefty fine. The mask rule quickly became common across the country after domestic migrant workers in Bangkok brought the virus to their hometown during Thai New Year, known as Songkran, this month.

https%253A%252F%252Fs3-ap-northeast-1.am

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha became the first known public figure to violate the rule on Monday. A photo of him in a meeting without a mask was shared on his Facebook page and quickly went viral. The prime minister admitted wrongdoing and was fined 6,000 baht that day. Bangkok fines 6,000 baht for the first violation, 12,000 baht for the second, and 20,000 baht for the third and beyond.

The prime minister's bungle did not quell growing public criticism over the government's failure to contain the third wave. The emergence of the third-wave has been traced to nightclubs in Bangkok popular with politicians and powerful businessmen, fueling people's anger along with a slow vaccine rollout.

According to an opinion survey conducted online by the Suan Dusit Rajabhat University from April 16 to April 22, 67% of 2,082 respondents fear that the government cannot cope with a resurgence situation or keep it under control.

Opposition party Move Forward accused government officials of negligence for allowing the third wave to spread. It demanded Deputy Prime Minister and Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul resign over the matter, which he refused to do.

The country's vaccination program is under fire once again. Only 1.8% of its adult population have received a first dose, while 0.3% received a second, according to The Economist. Prayuth said on Facebook Monday that the country has a goal of inoculating 50% of its population by the end of the year or sooner, lower than 70% previously stated.

Thailand relies heavily on domestic vaccine production by Siam Bioscience, which is part of King Maha Vajiralongkorn's vast business holdings. The biotech company aims to pass quality checks by several labs in Europe and the U.S. and register the vaccine with the Thai Food and Drug Administration, before rolling them out in July, about a month behind schedule.

Even though the company is licensed by AstraZeneca, some Thais doubt the company can mass produce the vaccines in a quality manner. The prime minister said the country targets to obtain 10 million to 15 million doses of various brands of vaccine per month, so that it can inoculate at least 300,000 people per day.

In Malaysia, a state of emergency declared in January to control the spread of the virus has proved futile, sparking a debate as to whether the declaration was a political move to safeguard premier Muhyiddin Yassin's shaky position with lack of support among lawmakers.

https%253A%252F%252Fs3-ap-northeast-1.am
Malaysians pray before breaking fast during Ramadan at a public park in Shah Alam, outside Kuala Lumpur, on April 25.   © EPA/Jiji

The state of emergency was imposed on Jan. 12 when cases were above 3,000 daily -- while a record high of 5,728 was recorded on January 30. The cases, however, declined since then to 1,285 on April 8, only to climb back to consistently above 2,500 now.

The government's flip-flop on policies over restrictions on movement, especially to accommodate fasting during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, is said to be among the factors for the spike in new cases. The reopening of schools has also resulted in increased cases among students and teachers.

As of Tuesday, Malaysia recorded almost 400,000 COVID-19 cases in the country since February 2020 -- from which some 26,000 are active cases. A total of 1,462 people have died due to the pandemic to date.

The immunization process which began this year has also been slow because of a short supply of vaccines and a skeptical public. Only 35% of the 27 million Malaysians eligible for the vaccines have registered for the shots.

Despite the lack of a vaccinated population, the government has eased some restrictions.

Malaysia's Health Director-General Noor Hisham Abdullah recently warned new cases in the country could increase to 5,000 a day because people are not complying with restrictions and other preventive measures such as mask orders.

He said the virus' effective reproduction rate stands at 1.16 where cases are expected to climb drastically if compliance remains weak. The Health Ministry had previously targeted for 500 new cases per day for next month.

COVID-19 infections in the Philippines surpassed 1 million on Monday, with nearly 9,000 new cases reported. The country has been grappling with its worst outbreak since last month, leaving hospitals overwhelmed and forcing President Rodrigo Duterte to impose stricter lockdown measures on Metro Manila and four nearby provinces, covering 24 million people.

The government has also set up modular health care facilities to accommodate a rising number of sick patients, but local health officials have advised against relaxing lockdown rules, which are set to expire at the end of the month.

"We see the importance to continue these restrictions to further decongest our health care system, which is primarily our major concern among our parameters," Maria Rosario Vergeire, health undersecretary, told reporters on Monday.

The surge in infections has been attributed to the easing of community quarantine restrictions. But an onslaught of new and believed to more contagious variants, such as those first detected in the U.K. and South Africa, exacerbated the situation. On Tuesday, the Philippines announced a two-week ban beginning Thursday on travelers from India.

Additional reporting by P Prem Kumar in Kuala Lumpur and Cliff Venzon in Manila
 

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  On 4/28/2021 at 11:01 AM, steveluv said:

https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Coronavirus/Thailand-s-new-COVID-wave-slams-hospitals-ignites-public-anger

Thailand's new COVID wave slams hospitals, ignites public anger
Malaysia restrictions prove futile; Philippine medical system short of beds

https%253A%252F%252Fs3-ap-northeast-1.am

Nurses tend to patients in a coronavirus intensive care unit at Vibhavadi Hospital in Bangkok on April 26.    © AFP/Jiji
MASAYUKI YUDA, Nikkei staff writerApril 28, 2021 13:59 JST

BANGKOK -- New waves of the coronavirus have prompted Southeast Asian countries to tighten restrictions on business and social activity as shortages of hospital beds stretch from Thailand to Malaysia to the Philippines.

Bangkok has closed more businesses including cinemas, gyms and parks for two weeks starting Monday, while a majority of the country's provinces have imposed a fine up to 20,000 baht ($635) for failing to wear a face mask in public. Malaysia has had new daily COVID-19 cases hover in the four digits for days despite emergency measures meant to control the spread. The Philippines' cumulative cases reached 1 million on Monday.

The new wave hits Thailand just as the country was looking to reopen its tourism-dependent economy and comes as variants of the coronavirus drive surges of infections in other Asian countries, notably India.

Thailand reported 2,179 new COVID-19 cases on Tuesday, bringing the total to 59,687 since the pandemic started. It was the fifth straight day Southeast Asia's second-largest economy recorded more than 2,000 daily cases. On Saturday, the kingdom logged 2,839 cases, a record high.

The epicenter of Thailand's third wave, which started in late March, has been Bangkok. The capital reported 993 cases on Tuesday. On Friday, the government warned that hospital beds in Bangkok could dry up in the next six to eight days if the situation is not brought under control.

Field hospitals have been prepared in Bangkok and surrounding provinces, but some patients have refused to be transferred there and opted to stay home, creating a mini cluster within their close circles of family and friends.

Thailand has recorded 163 COVID-19 deaths so far, but the government appears to be bracing for a higher death toll in coming days. The National Office of Buddhism ordered temples last week not to decline cremation services for people who die from the disease.

"We want to make sure that COVID-19 victims receive their last rites," a director of the agency said, according to local media.

To contain the new wave, Bangkok has imposed new business closures on top of the existing ones that have shuttered nightlife venues, such as bars and pubs, for a few weeks.

Shopping malls will operate for shorter hours from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., while convenience stores can open only from 5 a.m. to 10 p.m. Hair salons can provide cutting and washing services but will not allow dyeing and perming.

Roughly 50 out of 77 Thai provinces require people to wear a mask in public, enforced by a hefty fine. The mask rule quickly became common across the country after domestic migrant workers in Bangkok brought the virus to their hometown during Thai New Year, known as Songkran, this month.

https%253A%252F%252Fs3-ap-northeast-1.am

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha became the first known public figure to violate the rule on Monday. A photo of him in a meeting without a mask was shared on his Facebook page and quickly went viral. The prime minister admitted wrongdoing and was fined 6,000 baht that day. Bangkok fines 6,000 baht for the first violation, 12,000 baht for the second, and 20,000 baht for the third and beyond.

The prime minister's bungle did not quell growing public criticism over the government's failure to contain the third wave. The emergence of the third-wave has been traced to nightclubs in Bangkok popular with politicians and powerful businessmen, fueling people's anger along with a slow vaccine rollout.

According to an opinion survey conducted online by the Suan Dusit Rajabhat University from April 16 to April 22, 67% of 2,082 respondents fear that the government cannot cope with a resurgence situation or keep it under control.

Opposition party Move Forward accused government officials of negligence for allowing the third wave to spread. It demanded Deputy Prime Minister and Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul resign over the matter, which he refused to do.

The country's vaccination program is under fire once again. Only 1.8% of its adult population have received a first dose, while 0.3% received a second, according to The Economist. Prayuth said on Facebook Monday that the country has a goal of inoculating 50% of its population by the end of the year or sooner, lower than 70% previously stated.

Thailand relies heavily on domestic vaccine production by Siam Bioscience, which is part of King Maha Vajiralongkorn's vast business holdings. The biotech company aims to pass quality checks by several labs in Europe and the U.S. and register the vaccine with the Thai Food and Drug Administration, before rolling them out in July, about a month behind schedule.

Even though the company is licensed by AstraZeneca, some Thais doubt the company can mass produce the vaccines in a quality manner. The prime minister said the country targets to obtain 10 million to 15 million doses of various brands of vaccine per month, so that it can inoculate at least 300,000 people per day.

In Malaysia, a state of emergency declared in January to control the spread of the virus has proved futile, sparking a debate as to whether the declaration was a political move to safeguard premier Muhyiddin Yassin's shaky position with lack of support among lawmakers.

https%253A%252F%252Fs3-ap-northeast-1.am
Malaysians pray before breaking fast during Ramadan at a public park in Shah Alam, outside Kuala Lumpur, on April 25.   © EPA/Jiji

The state of emergency was imposed on Jan. 12 when cases were above 3,000 daily -- while a record high of 5,728 was recorded on January 30. The cases, however, declined since then to 1,285 on April 8, only to climb back to consistently above 2,500 now.

The government's flip-flop on policies over restrictions on movement, especially to accommodate fasting during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, is said to be among the factors for the spike in new cases. The reopening of schools has also resulted in increased cases among students and teachers.

As of Tuesday, Malaysia recorded almost 400,000 COVID-19 cases in the country since February 2020 -- from which some 26,000 are active cases. A total of 1,462 people have died due to the pandemic to date.

The immunization process which began this year has also been slow because of a short supply of vaccines and a skeptical public. Only 35% of the 27 million Malaysians eligible for the vaccines have registered for the shots.

Despite the lack of a vaccinated population, the government has eased some restrictions.

Malaysia's Health Director-General Noor Hisham Abdullah recently warned new cases in the country could increase to 5,000 a day because people are not complying with restrictions and other preventive measures such as mask orders.

He said the virus' effective reproduction rate stands at 1.16 where cases are expected to climb drastically if compliance remains weak. The Health Ministry had previously targeted for 500 new cases per day for next month.

COVID-19 infections in the Philippines surpassed 1 million on Monday, with nearly 9,000 new cases reported. The country has been grappling with its worst outbreak since last month, leaving hospitals overwhelmed and forcing President Rodrigo Duterte to impose stricter lockdown measures on Metro Manila and four nearby provinces, covering 24 million people.

The government has also set up modular health care facilities to accommodate a rising number of sick patients, but local health officials have advised against relaxing lockdown rules, which are set to expire at the end of the month.

"We see the importance to continue these restrictions to further decongest our health care system, which is primarily our major concern among our parameters," Maria Rosario Vergeire, health undersecretary, told reporters on Monday.

The surge in infections has been attributed to the easing of community quarantine restrictions. But an onslaught of new and believed to more contagious variants, such as those first detected in the U.K. and South Africa, exacerbated the situation. On Tuesday, the Philippines announced a two-week ban beginning Thursday on travelers from India.

Additional reporting by P Prem Kumar in Kuala Lumpur and Cliff Venzon in Manila
 

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i dont think we have seen the peaks from the songkran travels and over 1000 cases a day will be with us for a little while more ..

vaccinations still only under 241,000 with 2 doses in a population of 66.1 million ..

of the total of 61,699 cases since the start of the pandemic last year 27,119 are still in hospitals, 695 critical, 199 on ventilators ..

 

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steve i see the news vaccination registration on mor phrom line oa starts 1 may for 60 and over, and 1 july for 18-59 .. non citizen residents like you included?  

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  On 4/29/2021 at 12:50 AM, Mooose said:

steve i see the news vaccination registration on mor phrom line oa starts 1 may for 60 and over, and 1 july for 18-59 .. non citizen residents like you included?  

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Unfortunately locals have no bloody idea when is their turn for vaccination let alone foreigners like me. Sad.

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  On 4/29/2021 at 11:48 AM, steveluv said:

Unfortunately locals have no bloody idea when is their turn for vaccination let alone foreigners like me. Sad.

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as you would well know thats par for the course there unfortunately .. was hopeful when it was announced that private hospitals could source and import vaccines (at least there is an option of paying for your own vaccines if you so wish) but in reality thats not happening because the applications are not being approved ..

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  On 4/29/2021 at 11:30 AM, steveluv said:

New rules from May Day

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BCmkb20.jpg

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numbers may have peaked but are still high .. restrictions should help since most are local transmissions .. few are imported which makes me wonder why the quarantine for people entering the kingdom is increased back to 14 days ..

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  On 4/29/2021 at 12:26 PM, Mooose said:

as you would well know thats par for the course there unfortunately .. was hopeful when it was announced that private hospitals could source and import vaccines (at least there is an option of paying for your own vaccines if you so wish) but in reality thats not happening because the applications are not being approved ..

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https://www.tiktok.com/@smile4442/video/6914979884917935361?lang=en&is_copy_url=0&is_from_webapp=v1&sender_device=pc&sender_web_id=6956799092337673729

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  On 4/29/2021 at 12:31 PM, Mooose said:

numbers may have peaked but are still high .. restrictions should help since most are local transmissions .. few are imported which makes me wonder why the quarantine for people entering the kingdom is increased back to 14 days ..

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Because of recent stronger variants from all over the world particularly the Indian B.1.617

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  On 4/30/2021 at 5:30 AM, steveluv said:

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good to see that all provinces now require one to wear a mask when out ..

cases are down in greater bangkok but still increasing in the provinces ..

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