Virus easing 'in 4-6 weeks'

Virus easing 'in 4-6 weeks'

No lack of medical supplies, PM insists

Gen Prayut Chan-o-cha holds a video conference on the Covid-19 crisis at Government House with top business leaders on July 21, 2021. The prime minister reportedly said he hoped the situation would improve in the next four to six weeks. (Government House photo)
Gen Prayut Chan-o-cha holds a video conference on the Covid-19 crisis at Government House with top business leaders on July 21, 2021. The prime minister reportedly said he hoped the situation would improve in the next four to six weeks. (Government House photo)

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha hopes the Covid-19 situation in the country will ease in the next four to six weeks, a source said, amid public concerns over a rise in daily coronavirus cases.

"I hope the situation will improve in the next four to six weeks based on the current medical evidence," the source quoted Gen Prayut saying during an online meeting as the infection rate set another daily record of 16,533 new cases, along with 133 fatalities on Wednesday.

"But I am concerned about the public use of antigen test kits. I am not sure whether they know how to use them properly," Gen Prayut reportedly said.

Gen Prayut, in his capacity as the director of the Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration (CCSA), chaired an online meeting attended by governors of 12 "dark-red zone" provinces -- Pathum Thani, Chon Buri, Nonthaburi, Nakhon Pathom, Samut Sakhon, Ayutthaya, Chanchoengsao, Samut Prakan, Pattani, Narathiwat, Yala, and Songkha.

The urgent meeting was held because Gen Prayut wanted to better understand how each governor was managing the Covid-19 situation, said Anucha Burapachaisri, government spokesman. Deputy Prime Minister and Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul and other agencies were involved but the Bangkok governor did not attend.

The prime minister told the governors to update the government on their problems so the government could step in to fix them. They were also instructed to monitor and prevent transmissions caused by people moving across provinces.

During the meeting, each governor reported how they were handling Covid-19 infections. For example, the Chachoengsao governor said that a bubble and seal method was adopted to control infections at factories and worker camps which are main clusters in the province, with workers travelling from other provinces such as Samut Prakan.

Collecting bedding: Novice monks pick up donated bedding items at Wat Phon Ploy Wiriyaram in Bang Na district. Monks at the temple are confined in quarantine after 202 monks studying at the Buddhist school there tested positive for Covid-19 last week. (Photo: Wichan Charoenkiatpakul

Some factories were ordered closed for 14 days, the governor said. The meeting agreed the bubble and seal approach should be applied to provinces with Covid-19 clusters breaking out at factories.

During the meeting, Gen Prayut asked the governors whether the number of daily infections in their provinces had dropped at all, but none had any reply, the source said.

Gen Prayut said that they must publicise the number of people who had recovered and were discharged from hospitals, which in turn shows the number of hospital beds available for new patients, the source said.

Mr Anucha added that Gen Prayut told the meeting that the government is not sitting idle, adding that it has assigned the Public Health Ministry to adjust its policy to treat Covid-19 patients under home isolation or community isolation.

Mr Anucha said Gen Prayut insisted the country is not facing a shortage of medical supplies, including medicine and oxygen tanks. He pledged to provide support for all provinces, insisting Covid-19 vaccines will still be distributed to provinces as per government policy.

Mr Anutin gave an assurance that from next month onwards, an average of 10 million vaccine doses will be procured per month and an average of 1 million doses will be administered per day. The doses will be distributed to all target areas designated by the CCSA.

Meanwhile, Chalermchai Boonyaleepun, deputy chairman of a Senate committee on public health, said on social media there may be about 400,000-500,000 asymptomatic cases in Bangkok.

Symptomatic cases account for 20% of infections while asymptomatic cases account for up to 80%, Dr Chalermchai said. Even though RT-PCR tests are reliable, they have capacity constraints and are expensive, limiting large-scale use.

Therefore, most of the new daily cases were those detected in hospitals and medical facilities while the number of cases defected from proactive mass testing were lower, he said.

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