Phuket forced to re-think its ‘HEALTH SURVEILLANCE’

Looks like a fun place to visit....

Phuket has revamped its curiously named health surveillance measures to attract more domestic tourists and ease the workload on healthcare workers screening incoming visitors by road, says the provincial office.

Provincial governor Narong Woonciew said yesterday more than 30,000 people have travelled to Phuket in the sandbox tourism programme launched in July.

As the high tourism season from November to February is approaching, many domestic tourists are expected to arrive.

This has prompted changes to public health measures imposed at the Chatchai road checkpoint, where much land traffic to and from Phuket passes.

About 700-800 people pass through the checkpoint daily, creating a heavy workload for medical and health workers who juggle their time between testing incoming visitors at the checkpoint and caring for Covid-19 patients at local facilities.

Mr Narong said visitors are now able to test for Covid-19 at accredited medical outlets in their provinces and submit the results to officials once they reach the Chatchai checkpoint instead of having an on-the-spot swab test there.

The change has lightened the workload of officials at the checkpoint and made trips to Phuket less of a hassle.

At the same time, the province intends to vaccinate 200,000 people with booster doses, through the subcutaneous, under-skin, injection method, by the end of this month.