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Thailand reports 11,305 new COVID-19 cases, 80 more deaths


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Picture: REUTERS/Chalinee Thirasupa


Thailand on Tuesday (July 20) reported 11,305 new COVID-19 cases and 80 additional deaths over the past 24 hours. 
 

● 10,710 new infections
● 595 prison / prison infections
 

Tuesday’s cases bring the total number of COVID-19 infections in Thailand to 426,475 with 3,502 deaths. 


(Total infections since April 1: 397,612)


The news comes as Thailand's COVID-19 task force on Monday called on people to follow stricter containment measures, warning that without cooperation record daily infection rates could roughly treble to reach 30,000 under a worst-case scenario.

 

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16 minutes ago, TallGuyJohninBKK said:

After four successive days of new record high COVID cases, Thailand’s daily tally of new cases and deaths lessened slightly on Tuesday, even as projections showed higher totals ahead and the government imposed a new set of restrictions trying to stem the tide.

 

Thailand on Tuesday reported 11,305 new COVID cases, down from the latest pandemic record 11,784 the day before. The country also reported 80 new COVID deaths, down from 81 the day before. Such modest reductions have been common on early days of the week in recent weeks.

 

The latest numbers brought Thailand to having reported at least 10,000 new cases per day for the past four consecutive days. The new COVID cases reported Tuesday included 10,710 among the general public and 595 new cases from the nation’s prisons

 

With Tuesday’s update, Thailand now has cumulative totals of 426,475 COVID cases and 3,502 deaths since the start of the pandemic in early 2020. Overall, Thailand's current level of daily COVID cases has doubled from the 6,000-range daily cases of just two weeks ago.

 

The government Monday released one forecast with a worst case scenario of nearly 32,000 new cases per day, and a mid-range scenario of up to 24,000, by the end of October. A Kasikorn Research forecast showed the pandemic in a base case peaking at more than 15,000 daily cases by August, but also modeled a worst-case outlook of nearly 25,000 per day by then.

 

As a result, new government restrictions are taking effect today and are slated to continue at least thru August 2 in Bangkok and a dozen other hard-hit provinces. The aim is to slow the spread of the virus by broadening an existing overnight curfew and a new order telling residents in those provinces to stay home as much as possible.

 

The government first imposed the curfew and various other restrictions on 10 provinces including Bangkok early last week, saying it would reconsider after two weeks. But COVID cases then rose about 35 percent from about 8,600 then to nearly 12,000 per day now, forcing the government to toughen its rules and add three additional provinces including Chonburi.

 

Another major change is coming Wednesday, with a separate government order halting regular commercial domestic air flights into and out of Bangkok and the other dozen restricted provinces. Exempted would be flights to/from Phuket and Samui that recently have begun allowing only fully vaccinated tourists.

 

A COVID outbreak that once was centered mainly in Bangkok and several adjoining provinces lately has spread nationwide, with all of Thailand's provinces often reporting new cases daily. As of Monday, 32 of 77 provinces reported more than 100 new cases for the day, led by Bangkok with 2,134.

 

Health experts said the rising COVID cases and death tolls in Thailand have been spurred by the highly contagious Delta (India) variant of the coronavirus that’s now become dominant in the country. The pandemic has led to increased poverty, rising unemployment and simmering protests against the government.

 

In recent days, the COVID situation has shown signs of beginning to spiral out of control, with the government getting battered on the streets, in the news and in public opinion polls over the growing crush of cases and Thailand’s slow vaccination rollout, with only about 5 percent of Thais fully vaccinated thus far.

 

Over the weekend, thousands of political activists who oppose the military led government took to the streets in Bangkok and other cities to protest over the dearth of vaccines. Crowd control police responded with tear gas, water cannons and rubber bullets, according to news reports.

 

Leaked memos made headlines showing the government had been slow months ago to finalize contractual commitments for enough doses of its own locally produced version of the AstraZeneca vaccine, allowing a larger share to be exported and leaving Thailand with far less than it had promised the public.

 

The country’s health care system has been hit almost to the breaking point by the broadening pandemic. Thailand on Monday again reported new record highs for active COVID cases hospitalized (122,097), the share of those in critical condition (3,595), and the share of critical patients on ventilators at 856.

 

Total COVID hospitalizations have almost doubled in the past two weeks, and the share of those in critical condition has doubled in the past three weeks. As of Monday, Thailand's tally of critical condition COVID patients had risen to new daily records for the past 30 days in a row.

 

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https://www.facebook.com/informationcovid19/photos/a.106455480972785/368286208123043/?type=3

 

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https://www.facebook.com/informationcovid19/photos/a.106455480972785/368286131456384/?type=3

you write very fast

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Interesting. Again lower community numbers and higher prisoner numbers. Maybe just a coincedence. Thailand should now be No.52 on the covid charts and should take 50th spot or above by the end of the wk. Thailand is in the top ten for new infections and remains in the top 20 for weekly trends. Prayut let it run and run it has hence the meterioc move up the covid charts with a bullet.

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12 minutes ago, wasabi said:

The government keeps admonishing people to cooperate but what else can they do? I wonder if traditional measures like hand washing and masks are less effective against the Delta virus?

The Delta virus load is clearly higher, hence more contagious. I've seen no research but it would IMO make sense that masks and hand washing still work but less effectively.    

Edited by MikeyIdea
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35 minutes ago, TallGuyJohninBKK said:

In recent days, the COVID situation has shown signs of beginning to spiral out of control, with the government getting battered on the streets, in the news and in public opinion polls over the growing crush of cases and Thailand’s slow vaccination rollout, with only about 5 percent of Thais fully vaccinated thus far.

Please note I am in no way being critical of you post, you are doing a fantastic Job bringing us these figures on a Daily basis. keep it up. 

However, with only 2.50 Million Thais being fully Vaccinated with 2 shots of any Vaccine the number is far less than 5 % of the Population based on 66 Million.

It is actually only 3.8 %

A really poor Vaccination rate.

 

 

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2 minutes ago, robblok said:

Lets make a policy for those that want the gogo bars open, first get infected by covid delta. Then wait for recovery or death (i mean you have to take some risk for the fun your getting). Then get a card with I had covid im safe now and let them open for those with those cards. 

 

Double success guaranteed those wanting fun don't need vaccination and a large part will realize the disease is worse then they thought and some will confirm Darwins Theory.

 

But for the rest the strong they can have all the fun they want ????

 

This was meant in jest for those who don't have their sarcasm / humor detector on.

OTSS!  (only the strong survive ***** ******)  ????

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16 minutes ago, robblok said:

Lets make a policy for those that want the gogo bars open, first get infected by covid delta. Then wait for recovery or death (i mean you have to take some risk for the fun your getting). Then get a card with I had covid im safe now and let them open for those with those cards. 

 

Double success guaranteed those wanting fun don't need vaccination and a large part will realize the disease is worse then they thought and some will confirm Darwins Theory.

 

But for the rest the strong they can have all the fun they want ????

 

This was meant in jest for those who don't have their sarcasm / humor detector on.

Also force them to take a 1 year USD 100,000 health insurance which covers covid-19 or prove that they have 3.3 million baht in cash in a Thai bank account, or deport them if they refuse.

 

And let them get covid every 6 months as immunity doesn't last as long as vaccines. Good luck party goers ????

Edited by MikeyIdea
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9 minutes ago, robblok said:

Lets make a policy for those that want the gogo bars open, first get infected by covid delta. Then wait for recovery or death (i mean you have to take some risk for the fun your getting). Then get a card with I had covid im safe now and let them open for those with those cards. 

 

Double success guaranteed those wanting fun don't need vaccination and a large part will realize the disease is worse then they thought and some will confirm Darwins Theory.

 

But for the rest the strong they can have all the fun they want ????

 

This was meant in jest for those who don't have their sarcasm / humor detector on.

The types who want the bars open typically claim they had COVID last year. 

 

Or the flu. 

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11 minutes ago, BE88 said:

All these variants are no more dangerous than the original, certainly more contagious but no more dangerous.

 

Information like this is created only to create panic. 

 

 

 

 

I can’t say that it created any panic in me. Probably because it doesn’t say or imply that any of the variants are more dangerous than the original.

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11 minutes ago, BE88 said:

All these variants are no more dangerous than the original, certainly more contagious but no more dangerous.

 

Information like this is created only to create panic. 

 

 

Please provide a link to a study demonstrating the lethality of the Delta variant. 

 

Side note: it may be possible that Delta is more lethal to under-40s than other variants, but the same lethality for others. 

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5 minutes ago, brewsterbudgen said:

Just to report - my walk into the office today was no different to how it has been in the last few weeks.  Plenty of traffic (buses, taxis and motorbikes) and people in their company clothes going to work (mainly bank HOs and insurance companies).  All the normal street-food sellers were there.

 

The main difference this morning was that places like Starbucks, Subway, Mcdonalds were closed - previously they've been open for takeaway.  I found this a little strange as I thought cafes and takeaways could stay open.  

Perhaps the mainstream brand franchises feel that their workers should stay at home? Good for the street food sellers though, they can clean up!

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