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Flu outbreak sweeps Thailand: OCP9 reminds ‘mask up’ to stay well


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Thailand is grappling with a severe flu outbreak, with tens of thousands of patients reported in the past two months. The Office for Disease Control and Prevention 9 in Nakhon Ratchasima (OCP9) urges everyone to intensify precautionary measures and to continue wearing masks.

 

From January 1 to September 19, there have been 185,216 patients with flu and one death, with the majority being females. Most cases are found among 10 to 14 year olds, followed by newborns to four year olds and seven to nine year olds.

 

In the jurisdiction of Health Area 9, which includes the four lower northeastern provinces of Nakhon Ratchasima, Chaiyaphum, Buriram, and Surin, there have been 18,186 flu patients and one death from January 1 to September 16.


In the past eight weeks, from July 23 to September 16, 10,424 patients have been reported. Nakhon Ratchasima has the highest number of flu patients, with 4,088 cases, almost six times more than in the same period last year when there were only 744 cases.

 

by Nattapong Westwood 

Photo: KhaoSod.

 

Full story: The Thaiger 2023-10-03

 

- Cigna offers a range of visa-compliant plans that meet the minimum requirement of medical treatment, including COVID-19, up to THB 3m. For more information on all expat health insurance plans click here.

 

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28 minutes ago, 2long said:

Maybe because last year they weren't counting people with flu correctly, blaming some virus from China. Also, maybe people were either scared to leave home or even more scared to tell medical services that they have flu.

Unlikely because only those who tested covid+ were included in official figures for covid infections.

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Rational discussion of course is allowed, but don't spread unsubstantiated medical hysteria. We don't care what side of a debate you are on, but if you want to make claims of a medical nature back it up with *reliable* sources (Not politicians, bloggers, or news pundits).

 

Removed one such post as it violates our community standards.

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9 hours ago, poppysdad said:

I’m curious to know how they get these figures. Is it simply that those suffering went to hospital and so were recorded as having flu or do people go somewhere and record that they have an illness. I’m currently suffering from a bad cold, or perhaps a weak flu version but apart from going to a pharmacy for some meds I’m staying home and no official would be any the wiser to adding me to any statistics. 

But you are not Thai. They all go on the slightest pretence (family included) to get more of the magic tablets that cure everything as long as you take them for the rest of your Thai life. It is a joke what they take.

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If you can afford to get a yearly flu vaccine then get. 
Many expats usually downplay vaccines or any other medical treatments.  Because they either have little to no health insurance.  Or sufficient funds to pay for it.  

 

 

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13 hours ago, swm59nj said:

If you can afford to get a yearly flu vaccine then get. 
Many expats usually downplay vaccines or any other medical treatments.  Because they either have little to no health insurance.  Or sufficient funds to pay for it.  

 

 

The price of a flu shot is a pittance.  If you want the shot. 

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