Cape Times

Medical tourism giving Thais right tools to contain Mers

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BANGKOK: Thailand’s status as a hub for medical tourism could be helping the country contain the spread of Middle East Respirator­y Syndrome (Mers), government and health officials said, after confirming its first case of the deadly virus last week.

Tourism accounts for about 10 percent of the Thai economy and the country is also the top destinatio­n in South-East Asia for patients seeking lowcost, quality health care, with an average 1.4 million medical tourists a year, compared with 600 000 for Singapore, a Thai medical tourism associatio­n said. That meant the stakes were high for Thailand when the health ministry reported on Thursday the first case of Mers in a 75-year-old man from Oman, who had travelled to Bangkok for treatment for a heart condition.

South Korea, currently battling the largest Mers outbreak outside Saudi Arabia, reported two more deaths and three new cases on Monday, bringing the number of fatalities to 27 and the total infections to 172.

In Thailand, although authoritie­s said 176 people had been exposed to the Mers patient, Deputy Health Minister Vachira Pengchan said yesterday there were no new cases. “It is the very fact that we are a travel and medical hub that works in our favour and that allows us to be prepared,” said Tourism Minister Kobkarn Wattanavra­ngkul.

“It is our experience handling foreign visitors and medical tourists from high-risk regions like the Middle East and South Korea. Thailand is also prepared because we saw what happened in South Korea – we had time.”

As well as being a gateway for many of the more than 25 million visitors to Thailand each year, Bangkok is also one of the region’s main aviation hubs.

At the city’s Suvarnabhu­mi Airport, face masks were handed out to passengers at the weekend, while Thailand’s health and tourism ministers showed reporters thermoscan­ning equipment and special aeroplane parking bays set aside for flights coming in from high-risk countries.

The airport has ordered heightened screening of arrivals from South Korea and the Middle East, general manager Sirote Duangratan­a told reporters.

The unidentifi­ed man who laboratory tests confirmed on June 18 had Mers was a patient at the high-end Bumrungrad Hospital. Popular with internatio­nal visitors, it says 20 percent of its patients are from the Middle East.

The sick man was later moved to an infectious disease institute. Doctors at Bumrungrad Hospital said on Friday that 58 staff had been quarantine­d and were under observatio­n.

Prasert Thongcharo­en, an adviser to Thailand’s Disease Control Department, said he had investigat­ed Bumrungrad’s handling of the Mers case and found it to be “flawless”. – Reuters

South Korea, currently battling the largest Mers outbreak outside Saudi Arabia, reported two more deaths and three new cases

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