Bangkok Post

Covid case rate ‘is getting worse’

- ACHADTHAYA CHUENNIRAN

Covid-19 infections have worsened in the island province over the past month, the Provincial Public Health Office said, citing a steady increase in caseloads.

Dr Muanprae Boonlorm, the office’s deputy chief, said more Covid-19 sufferers have been treated at Vachira Phuket Hospital since the Songkran holiday in mid-April.

The number of those hospitalis­ed for pneumonia and fatalities caused by Covid-19 was also reported to have gone up compared to the February to March period.

Dr Muanprae said the rise in Covid-19 infections was likely to have stemmed from people being lax in practising preventive measures and a lack of fourth or fifth booster shots.

Most who have died from the infection between April and so far this month were in the so-called “608” at-risk group; people 60 years and over, those with underlying conditions and pregnant women.

Many people in this group were found to be unvaccinat­ed or undervacci­nated. Some received their last booster shots more than a year ago.

Despite rising infections, Dr Muanprae said the province has the capacity to handle hospitalis­ations from Covid-19, with 15-20% of beds in Covid-19 wards full.

Thais who have not received a booster shot for the last six months to a year can get their injections for free at any hospital on the island, said Dr Muanprae, who suggested they check the availabili­ty of the vaccine with local hospitals as some offer the vaccinatio­n service just once a week.

Meanwhile, in Ubon Ratchathan­i, the Department of Thai Traditiona­l and Alternativ­e Medicine (DTAM) director-general, Thongchai Lertwilair­attanapong, said the pandemic has taught people and those in the medical profession the value of herbal medicine in the public health system.

Speaking at a workshop on the promotion of traditiona­l medicine, he said the value of herbal medicine used last year jumped to 5.2 billion baht, three times the previous year’s figure. The hike was attributed to more people turning to traditiona­l medicine for treatment of Covid-19.

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