Thanks all for the comments! I'll be doing more research on the testing procedures and travel recommendations in Thailand for my next video based on your comments. Please see my links and replies below in the mean time.
Something is definitely going right in Thailand because of which number of cases are almost constant. Even if they don’t have infra to test hundred or thousand of people in a day but some might definitely been getting tested daily and their result is giving false hence no increase in cases. I want to know out of those 37 positive cases how many are chinese? Next is it really unsafe to visit Phuket and Bangkok right now as my holiday is also planned for 29th Feb
I would follow current guidance from the US CDC and Thailand's MOPH. Currently, their recommendation is to practice good hygiene and typical precautionary measures against respiratory diseases, such as influenza. As of now, there is no evidence that sustained community spread of the disease is currently occurring anywhere in Thailand, so unless you are an at-risk group (e.g., elderly with underlying medical conditions), major adjustments to travel plans are not currently recommended, wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices ddc.moph.go.th/viralpneumonia/eng/index.php ddc.moph.go.th/viralpneumonia/eng/introduction.php
Rishab Srivastava I am Thai. From what I know, around 30 out of 37 are Chinese . By the way, our country is still in phrase 2 of epidemic and our medical service is very easy to reach , also rank world #6 in medical service.
MO SU Where you live btw? I’m like a mask man now, I can see people wear mask everywhere I go. Most Thais think protection is better than curing. Anyway, by social trends a lot of students who did high score in university admission test tend to study medicine.
I would follow current guidance from the US CDC and Thailand's MOPH. Currently, their recommendation is to practice good hygiene and typical precautionary measures against respiratory diseases, such as influenza. As of now, there is no evidence that sustained community spread of the disease is currently occurring anywhere in Thailand, so unless you are an at-risk group (e.g., elderly with underlying medical conditions), major adjustments to travel plans are not currently recommended, wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices ddc.moph.go.th/viralpneumonia/eng/index.php ddc.moph.go.th/viralpneumonia/eng/introduction.php
I would follow current guidance from the US CDC and Thailand's MOPH. Currently, their recommendation is to practice good hygiene and typical precautionary measures against respiratory diseases, such as influenza. As of now, there is no evidence that sustained community spread of the disease is currently occurring anywhere in Thailand, so unless you are an at-risk group (e.g., elderly with underlying medical conditions), major adjustments to travel plans are not currently recommended, wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices ddc.moph.go.th/viralpneumonia/eng/index.php ddc.moph.go.th/viralpneumonia/eng/introduction.php
Thanks all for the comments! I'll be doing more research on the testing procedures and travel recommendations in Thailand for my next video based on your comments. Please see my links and replies below in the mean time.
Good report . Thank you for posting.
Something is definitely going right in Thailand because of which number of cases are almost constant. Even if they don’t have infra to test hundred or thousand of people in a day but some might definitely been getting tested daily and their result is giving false hence no increase in cases. I want to know out of those 37 positive cases how many are chinese? Next is it really unsafe to visit Phuket and Bangkok right now as my holiday is also planned for 29th Feb
I agree. The Thai figures are unbelievable. I cancelled my holiday but was it necessary to do that? I just do not trust the Thai authorities.
I would follow current guidance from the US CDC and Thailand's MOPH. Currently, their recommendation is to practice good hygiene and typical precautionary measures against respiratory diseases, such as influenza. As of now, there is no evidence that sustained community spread of the disease is currently occurring anywhere in Thailand, so unless you are an at-risk group (e.g., elderly with underlying medical conditions), major adjustments to travel plans are not currently recommended,
wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices
ddc.moph.go.th/viralpneumonia/eng/index.php
ddc.moph.go.th/viralpneumonia/eng/introduction.php
@@person.X. iam in Thailand and its scary here i see people dont care this virus dont wear mask simply government here dont speak anything
Rishab Srivastava I am Thai. From what I know, around 30 out of 37 are Chinese . By the way, our country is still in phrase 2 of epidemic and our medical service is very easy to reach , also rank world #6 in medical service.
MO SU Where you live btw? I’m like a mask man now, I can see people wear mask everywhere I go. Most Thais think protection is better than curing. Anyway, by social trends a lot of students who did high score in university admission test tend to study medicine.
Thank you for your information.
We Cancelled our trip because Thailand had thousands of Wuhan Chinese visit for their New Year vacation
Sid Luscious should I do the same?
I would follow current guidance from the US CDC and Thailand's MOPH. Currently, their recommendation is to practice good hygiene and typical precautionary measures against respiratory diseases, such as influenza. As of now, there is no evidence that sustained community spread of the disease is currently occurring anywhere in Thailand, so unless you are an at-risk group (e.g., elderly with underlying medical conditions), major adjustments to travel plans are not currently recommended,
wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices
ddc.moph.go.th/viralpneumonia/eng/index.php
ddc.moph.go.th/viralpneumonia/eng/introduction.php
My wife lives in kk.
Should I cancel mi trip to Bangkok?
I would follow current guidance from the US CDC and Thailand's MOPH. Currently, their recommendation is to practice good hygiene and typical precautionary measures against respiratory diseases, such as influenza. As of now, there is no evidence that sustained community spread of the disease is currently occurring anywhere in Thailand, so unless you are an at-risk group (e.g., elderly with underlying medical conditions), major adjustments to travel plans are not currently recommended,
wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices
ddc.moph.go.th/viralpneumonia/eng/index.php
ddc.moph.go.th/viralpneumonia/eng/introduction.php
Have read via ua-cam.com/video/9V9_IuKnEdU/v-deo.html you won't be flying out of UAE or Kuwait. I would hold back and wait.