COVID-19 Situation Update 8
Date: September 20th, 2021
Background
The current wave of COVID-19 in Tak Province of Thailand, bordering Burma, began in late June, with large outbreaks detected in factories in the area. There are 3,456 cases currently receiving treatment for the disease in Tak. The biggest city in the province, Mae Sot (home to the clinic), along with its neighboring districts, continues to accumulate over 100 new patients per day, resulting in prolonged, severe strains on the local medical system. On Sunday, September 19th, there were 134 new cases diagnosed in Tak, with 103 of those in Mae Sot, home to the clinic, and the nearby districts of Phop Phra, Mae Ramat, and Tha Song Yang. Since April 1st, 2021, a total of 13,702 cases (+1,569 from the last weekly update) have been reported in the province (Tak Provincial Public Relations Office Page).
Since June 28th, the Mae Tao Clinic has been an official field hospital for the Mae Sot public health system, providing care for infected individuals deemed low risk for developing complications or severe disease. While MTC staff members are responsible for providing daily care, they work in partnership with medical staff of the Mae Sot Hospital and other Thai public health entities, closely monitoring patients for evidence of clinical deterioration and facilitating timely referrals if necessary. There are 44 people infected with COVID-19 who are currently under MTC’s supervision, a decrease of 16 since the last weekly update. Since the start of the current wave, MTC has treated 652 COVID-19 patients who have either been referred from the Thai health system, are staff from MTC and partner organizations or are residents of the surrounding communities.
The ongoing steady increase in the number of newly infected persons in the Mae Sot area has placed a serious and now prolonged strain on the local health system. In order to help alleviate the pressure on the Mae Sot public health system, beginning in early August, the MTC partnered with the Mae Sot Hospital to form a local COVID-19 control committee. The committee worked to establish alternate isolation systems for mildly ill patients or those without symptoms, thereby freeing up health facilities and personnel to care for those more severely ill, while also while closely monitoring patients and facilitating timely referrals, if needed. These measures also helped provided another source for isolation and quarantine services to help control community spread. Home isolation guidelines were also developed and disseminated to those being isolated and treated at home, in factories and in the community. The MTC, working closely with other members of the committee, began providing services for patients undergoing these alternative isolation procedures in the Tha Sai Luat District, just west of Mae Sot city, bordering Burma. These include not only providing monitoring and assessments, along with referrals, for patients, many of whom live in remote areas, but also testing services for COVID-19, medical waste management, and food support.
The ongoing spread of COVID-19 has also added other, severe, indirect strains on the health system. With health facilities forced to close or curtail their services to address the epidemic, those still operational have faced additional demands for non-COVID-19-related services, particularly for maternal and child health services. Thus, MTC made the decision to resume care for expectant migrant women, many of whom would otherwise face multiple challenges in accessing essential maternal and child healthcare. These services were resumed on the 17th of August. In addition, in order that interruptions to essential child preventive health care be minimized, immunization services for women and children resumed on August 30th. The clinic also resumed outpatient reproductive health services on September 6th to provide care for migrant women with high-risk pregnancies. Prior to the resumption of all these services, strict COVID-19 prevention guidelines and protocols were put in place in order that these essential services could be provided safely, including controls on the number of clients waiting at any given time. Services were initially resumed in a limited fashion, in order to comply with these guidelines and due to limitations in staffing and infrastructure. However, due to high demand, an additional day a week has been added. We plan next to resume adult outpatient health services on September 22nd in order to avoid or reduce treatment interruptions for our patients in need of services to help manage non-communicable diseases or HIV/AIDS. We will continue to closely monitor patient flows and gradually resume other essential outpatient services as soon as it can safely be done.
Category | Total Case | New Case | Ref5erred to MSH | Currently under supervision | Recovered/discharged |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Clinical staff | 66 | 0 | 5 | 0 | 66 |
Non-Clinical Staff | 100 | 0 | 12 | 0 | 100 |
Household Contact | 110 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 109 |
Surrounding community contact | 85 | 0 | 5 | 10 | 75 |
Patient | 86 | 12 | 9 | 28 | 52 |
RH delivery patients and their family | 7 | 1 | 3 | 2 | 2 |
Field Hospital | 198 | 2 | 6 | 3 | 195 |
Total | 652 | 15 | 42 | 44 | 599 |
- Last updated on September 16st 2021
As of September 16st, 44 people infected with COVID-19 (41 staff members, household contacts, surrounding community members, patients and their household members, and 3 referred from the Mae Sot public health system) are in isolation within the clinic compound. Those who have had close contact with patients confirmed to have COVID-19 are also quarantined. A total of 599 people infected with COVID-19 have recovered and have been discharged after at least 14 days isolation and monitoring. The clinic is currently in the process of screening staff members who have recovered from COVID-19 to assess for potential longer-term impairments which may impact their ability to work prior to their return.
Under the Thai national COVID-19 vaccine rollout plan, frontline health workers, including staff from MTC, have been receiving vaccinations this year. Currently, 262 MTC staff have received vaccinations, of which 80 are now fully vaccinated (with two doses of Sinovac, Sinopharm or AstraZeneca) and 10 staff who have completed the two-dose series of Sinovac received an additional 3rd booster dose of AstraZeneca. An additional 176 will get their second dose of vaccine either in the last week of September or early October. Vaccination efforts have been focused on individuals at high risk for infection or its consequences, such as IPD staff, and other staff and people in the community at higher risk for exposure, along with those over age 55 and/or with comorbidities.
In addition, MTC has been designated to be a vaccination site for the migrant community in Mae Sot, working as part of the Thailand vaccination rollout plan. As part of this initiative, during the second week of September, 437 staff of MTC and its partner organizations, along with community members on the priority list for exposure to and consequences of COVID-19, were given their first or second vaccine dose with Sinopharm by trained health workers of MTC and its partner organizations. The next round of vaccinations at MTC will take place on September 21st and 25th, and 234 people on the priority list (comprised of the elderly, those with chronic diseases or HIV/AIDS, and pregnant women) will receive their first dose of Sinopharm. MTC, CBOs and EHOs will continue working with International NGOs to advocate for vaccine equity, helping expand access for vulnerable populations living along the Thai-Burma border. Expanding such measures will not only protect the lives and livelihoods of among the most marginalized populations in the region but will also help to address the significant and growing health security threat posed by COVID-19 to Thailand the region, particularly given widening conflict, human rights abuses, displacement and forced migration in Burma.
Clinical Services
To prevent and control further transmission clinical services except those in reproductive health care, adult care and immunizations (as detailed above), remain closed. Please refer to the Facebook pages of the Mae Tao Clinic (in Englishand Burmese), which will frequently be updated to incorporate the most up-to-date information as it becomes available, particularly during the current unpredictable situation.
There have been many inquiries about testing and vaccinations for COVID-19. Unfortunately, the clinic is unable to provide these services at the present time as they are all currently handled through the Thai health system. If you think you have been exposed and would like testing, please contact the Mae Sot Hospital call center Tel. 065-461-1120 or the COVID-19 call center Tel. 1330. To access COVID-19 treatment, you can register in the Thai health system through the call center Tel. 1130, extension number 14, or add the Line account @sabaideebot and follow further instructions. If you have tested positive using a rapid test (antigen test kit), please call migrant home isolation center at Tel. 065-476-9295 or 065-476-6560. Services are available in Burmese and the center will help provide services including monitoring and health assessments, food and medicine support, and transportation support, if necessary.
For the latest vaccine information, please visit the Thai Government Public Relations Department’s officialFacebook page. For those who are in need of assistance in management of non-communicable (chronic)diseases or HIV/AIDS, please contact Ms Sophia Hla (English, Burmese and Karen language), Tel. 081-037-5800 or Ms Sable Moe (Burmese and Karen language), Tel. 06-2945-6208. For information or to make an appointment for routine (non-COVID-19) immunizations such as for hepatitis B, BCG (tuberculosis), or diptheria/tetanus/pertussis, please contact Mr Pai Soe Moe (Burmese and Karen language), Tel. 09-4431-4984.
Donations/Support
We are deeply thankful for all those that have and continue to support our work and the communities we work with. For those interested in doing so, please understand that as a COVID-19 field hospital in the midst of a serious epidemic, to ensure safety for everyone, we are very limited in what we are able to accept. We are currently not able to accept cooked food or individually purchased medicines. If you would like to donate clothes or bedding, we respectfully request that these are new and in their original packaging. The supplies that we are currently most in need of are listed below.
General Social Support |
Dry food (rice; tinned fish; cooking oil; salt; yellow beans; chili powder; seasoning etc.) |
Nutritional supplements (milk; milo) |
New bedding (mat; pillow; blanket; mosquito net) |
Medical Supplies |
PPEs (surgical mask for medical use; face shields; medical/ hospital grade gloves; medical coveralls) |
N95 face mask |
Infrared Thermometers |
Pulse oximeters |
Surgical Scrubs |
Disinfectants |
Alcohol 70% + Glycerin 1% or Alcohol Gel |
Lab Supplies |
COVID-19 Rapid Antigen Testing Kits (approved by Thai FDA)* |
Glucose test (50/box) |
Hygiene Supplies |
Personal Hygiene Kit (soap; shampoo; toothpaste & toothbrush; sanitation pad; toilet paper) |
*The list of approved kits can be found on the Thai FDA website, here:https://www.fda.moph.go.th/sites/Medical/SitePages/test_kit_covid19.aspx
Please note that this list is dynamic and, given the rapidly evolving circumstances, will be frequently updated to reflect our changing needs and priorities. For further questions regarding donations, please contact the designated persons listed below.
Contact information
For general inquiries and donations, please contact the following:
- Ms Nwe Ni (English, Burmese and Thai language), Tel. 084-820-3743
- Ms Naw Annie (English, Burmese and Karen language), Tel. 089-916-5855
- Ms Pattinee Suanprasert (English and Thai language), Tel. 087-677-1415
For media inquiries:
- Communication team, fundraising@maetaoclinic.org
- Ms Pattinee Suanprasert (Thai language), Tel. 087-677-1415
For clinical inquiries:
- Ms Sophia Hla (English, Burmese and Karen language), Tel. 081-037-5800
- Ms Wah Kuh Paw (Burmese and Karen language), Tel. 089-961-7316
For those interested in supporting our COVID-19 emergency response efforts directly: this can be done through deposits/wire transfer to the following account:
Account Name: Suwannimit Foundation for Mae Tao Clinic
Account Number: 016-8-83807-7
Bank and Branch: Kasikorn Bank, Mae Sot
SWIFT Code: KASITHBK
Bank Address: 84/9, Prasart Withi Rd., Mae Sot, Tak Province 63110, Thailand
For more donation information, please visit our donation page: https://maetaoclinic.org/how-to-help/donate/ or contact at fundraising@maetaoclinic.org