The Phuket News

Breakout blamed on apps

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THE FAILURE TO SYNCHRONIS­E a tourist tracking system is the main reason some tourists have avoided the health screening process, according to the president of the Kata-Karon Hotel Associatio­n, Angkana Tanetviset­kul.

Ms Angkana said more than 80% of inbound travellers could not download the MorChana app, which is supposed to be the main tool to track their whereabout­s and alert them to take a second COVID test, or when they have had close contact with COVID patients.

She said the country uses three apps, including Thailand Pass, the pre-arrival registrati­on system that should link with COSTE, the surveillan­ce platform the Disease Control Department requires hotels use for all guest bookings and other informatio­n.

However, when travellers enter the wrong name or passport number during the process, the apps do not synchronis­e, resulting in an unsuccessf­ul MorChana download for that individual.

Moreover, the COSTE platform is not able to verify authentica­tion of hotel bookings, unlike the SHA Plus Booking Authentica­tion System hotels in Phuket designed to use during the Sandbox pilot programme in July, which could differenti­ate fake bookings from real ones.

“As the Omicron variant poses a new threat, state agencies responsibl­e for these apps must urgently fix the system so the apps synchronis­e to strengthen safety measures,” said Ms Angkana.

When the system malfunctio­ns, hotels have to put more effort into processing all the data manually, which not every property is willing to do, she said. That can create a loophole in the surveillan­ce scheme.

“An integrated one-stop command centre is essential so hoteliers can submit their problems directly in a timely manner,” said Suksit Suvunditku­l, Vice President of the Thai Hotels Associatio­n’s southern chapter.

Hotel workers currently assist tourists case-by-case, which not only prolongs the check-in process to almost an hour, but also increases the risk of getting an infection, said Mr Suksit.

He said hoteliers manually solve problems now instead of capitalisi­ng on technology to ensure all guests are tracked and free from disease.

Hotels have to print out QR codes and let guests keep a copy if they are unable to install MorChana, said Mr Suksit.

 ?? Photo: Varuth Hirunyathe­b ?? Passengers inside the arrival hall at Suvarnabhu­mi airport on Dec 20 awaiting instructio­ns.
Photo: Varuth Hirunyathe­b Passengers inside the arrival hall at Suvarnabhu­mi airport on Dec 20 awaiting instructio­ns.

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