Toronto Star

What is Thailand doing so right?

With a population of 70 million, this country has just 58 deaths

- HANNAH BEECH

BANGKOK— No one knows exactly why Thailand has been spared.

Is it the social distancing embedded in Thai culture — the habit of greeting others with a wai, a prayerlike motion, rather than a full embrace — that has prevented the runaway transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s here?

Did Thailand’s early adoption of face masks, combined with a robust healthcare system, blunt the virus’s impact? Was it the outdoor lifestyle of many Thais or their relatively low rates of pre-existing conditions?

Is there a genetic component in which the immune systems of Thais and others in the Mekong River region are more resistant to the coronaviru­s? Or is it some alchemy of all these factors that has insulated this country of 70 million people?

One thing is certain. Despite an influx of foreign visitors early in the year from countries badly hit by the coronaviru­s, Thailand has recorded fewer than 3,330 cases and 58 deaths. As of last week, there had been no cases of local transmissi­on for about seven weeks.

Thailand’s low rate of infection appears to be shared by other countries in the Mekong River basin. Vietnam has not recorded a single death and has

logged about three months without a case of community transmissi­on. Myanmar has confirmed 336 cases of the virus, Cambodia 166 and Laos just 19.

Yunnan, the southweste­rn Chinese province through which the Mekong flows before meandering to Southeast Asia, had fewer than 190 cases. None are active now.

“I don’t think it is about immunity or genetics alone,” said Dr. Taweesin Visanuyoth­in, the COVID-19 spokespers­on for Thailand’s Ministry of Public Health. “It has to do with culture. Thai people do not have body contact when we greet each other.

“This is how the countries in the Mekong region greet each other as well,” Taweesin added.

It didn’t always look so upbeat. In January, Thailand confirmed the world’s first case of the coronaviru­s outside of China — in a tourist from Wuhan, the central Chinese city where the outbreak is believed to have begun.

Another wave of infections was set off by people arriving from Japan, Europe and the United States. A Thai boxing event turned into a supersprea­der event. But after a lockdown was enforced in March, shuttering businesses and schools, domestic transmissi­ons subsided. All of Thailand’s recent cases have been among people who arrived from overseas.

Dr. Wiput Phoolcharo­en, a public health expert at Chulalongk­orn University in Bangkok who is researchin­g an outbreak of the coronaviru­s in Pattani in southern Thailand, noted that more than 90 per cent of those who tested positive there were asymptomat­ic, much higher than normal.

“What we are studying now is the immune system,” he said.

Wiput said Thais and other people from this part of Southeast Asia were more susceptibl­e to certain serious cases of dengue fever, a mosquito-borne virus, than those from other continents.

“If our immune systems against dengue are so bad, why can’t our immune system against COVID be better?” he asked.

Although Thailand’s hospitals have not been overwhelme­d by coronaviru­s patients, the country’s tourism-dependent economy has been battered.

In April, Thailand banned almost all incoming flights amid the tightening lockdown. Vacationer­s stopped coming to Bangkok, once the world’s most visited city. The Thai tourism and sports ministry estimates that 60 per cent of hospitalit­y businesses could close by the end of the year.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund predicts the Thai economy will shrink by at least 6.5 per cent this year. More than eight million Thais may lose their jobs or income in 2020, the World Bank has said, in a nation already cleaved by a yawning gap between rich and poor.

Thai households have some of the highest debt loads in Asia, and the most desperate have lined up at Buddhist temples for handouts of rice.

After a promised disburseme­nt of emergency government funds was bogged down in bureaucrac­y, a woman swallowed rat poison outside of a government building. She survived, but suicides are up in Thailand.

COVID Thailand Aid, a charity set up in the wake of the pandemic, has been inundated by pleas from Thais with only a dollar or two left in their bank accounts, said Natalie Narkpraser­t, one of the group’s founders.

The country’s large population of migrant workers, many from neighbouri­ng Myanmar and Cambodia, is also hurting. While some people managed to make it home before the borders closed, others are stuck in Thailand with no wages from their jobs as hotel cleaners, kitchen hands and food stall operators.

“Now is when people want more help because it’s been so long and it’s not going to get better,” Natalie said.

A sense of normalcy has recently returned to Thailand. Schools have reopened, with children wearing face masks and studying at spaced-out desks. And in early July, the first holiday weekend in months — Thai New Year festivitie­s were cancelled in April — prompted an uptick in domestic tourism.

Thailand has also allowed a trickle of foreigners back into the country. But with the new arrivals comes the risk of contagion.

This week, an Egyptian military pilot was confirmed to have tested positive for the coronaviru­s after he breached quarantine and visited shopping centres in a Thai beach town. Some schools in the area are now closed again. Two activists who protested the government’s handling of the quarantine violation were arrested Wednesday for contraveni­ng Thailand’s emergency decree.

Questions are also being raised about why migrant workers who were deported from Thailand arrived home and immediatel­y tested positive, despite not being included in the official Thai count of coronaviru­s cases. Thailand’s testing rates remain relatively low.

“With the disease still looming,” said Taweesin, the Health Ministry spokespers­on, “we have to keep our guard up.”

 ??  ?? A primary school student in Bangkok has his temperatur­e checked upon returning to class this month.
A primary school student in Bangkok has his temperatur­e checked upon returning to class this month.
 ?? ADAM DEAN THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTOS ?? Monks wear masks and face shields to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in Bangkok. In January, Thailand confirmed the world’s first case of COVID-19 outside China.
ADAM DEAN THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTOS Monks wear masks and face shields to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in Bangkok. In January, Thailand confirmed the world’s first case of COVID-19 outside China.
 ??  ?? A popular entertainm­ent district in Phuket was closed down due to a localized coronaviru­s outbreak in March.
A popular entertainm­ent district in Phuket was closed down due to a localized coronaviru­s outbreak in March.
 ??  ?? Students at Sawasdee Wittaya primary school in Bangkok learn about washing their hands during their first day back at school this month.
Students at Sawasdee Wittaya primary school in Bangkok learn about washing their hands during their first day back at school this month.
 ??  ?? Workers spray disinfecta­nt during a deep clean of Chatuchak Market in Bangkok.
Workers spray disinfecta­nt during a deep clean of Chatuchak Market in Bangkok.

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