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Search Result for “home for the elderly”

Showing 1 - 10 of 18

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BUSINESS

Women's work

Asia focus, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 18/10/2021

» Amid wave after wave of Covid-19 in Japan, Mariko, a college lecturer and mother, has been working and raising her four-year-old daughter in an apartment shared by a family of four in Tokyo.

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OPINION

Shooting messengers won't solve crisis

News, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 02/08/2021

» Thailand is doing better than other countries in curbing the Covid-19 pandemic. We have several thousand cases and more than 100 deaths a day. But the government led by Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha can handle the situation effectively, and you all can trust his dream team. Everyone can easily access testing and vaccines. No one dies on the street. No one is left behind in a severe health condition.

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OPINION

Thailand must lend a hand to the Karen

News, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 05/04/2021

» Pictures of Karen people, including children and the elderly, crowded on the banks of Myanmar's Salween River while attempting to flee the country as their communities were targeted by air strikes launched by the Tatmadaw, and taking refuge on Thai soil triggered sympathy among many Thais. Criticism has also been deafening over allegations made by human rights groups that Thai authorities pushed back the Karen into the war zone.

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BUSINESS

Tech for everyone

Asia focus, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 15/02/2021

» For many people, seeing a lot of old people in a hospital is something expected, even mundane. But for Dr Kanapon Phumratprapin, it was a challenge that he wanted to help solve.

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OPINION

Outbreak no reason to delay polls

News, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 22/06/2020

» After a six-year vacuum in local politics, by the end of this year, some Thais might be able to cast their votes to elect local administrators.

OPINION

Will ‘welfare state’ promises be honoured?

Oped, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 25/03/2019

» Following the general election yesterday, elected politicians will be closely watched how and whether they will keep the many promises made during their poll campaigns. One is their pledge to make Thailand a “welfare state”. Pheu Thai vows to improve the existing Universal Healthcare Coverage scheme, initiated by its precursor Thai Rak Thai. It also came up with a fresh idea of a “lottery savings” scheme that will encourage personal savings through the purchase of a lottery ticket.

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THAILAND

Migrants face changing climate

Spectrum, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 01/07/2018

» The arrival of May once reminded Lin Na that the first rain of the year was on its way. The ground in her small village of Prey Veng province in southern Cambodia would start to soften, dampened by rainfall. This time each year, she would help her family cultivate a two-hectare rice field, the main source of food and income for them throughout the year.

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THAILAND

Checking up on universal coverage

Spectrum, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 18/02/2018

» Installing the right medical facilities to take care of a sick family member at home could cost nearly the entire fortune for a household of six people. In the centre of Bangkok's commercial Lumpini area, the shabby-looking house of the Jan-urai family stands amid the Bon Kai community, a slum adjacent to the high-end Polo Club where the wealthy Bangkok elite gather for sporting events.

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THAILAND

Weathering water's extremes

Spectrum, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 12/11/2017

» Since downpours from the North swept down into the central Chao Phraya River basin early last month, people are fearfully bracing for the next big flood to hit Bangkok. The Thai government tells the public it is making a concentrated effort to ensure the capital will be protected from future flooding. Despite the heavy rainfall this year, leaders have dismissed the possibility of another flood like 2011's.

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THAILAND

Lost in translation: migrant patients face language gap

Spectrum, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 05/11/2017

» Standing at the seaside pier in Ranong province, the noise of engines never really cuts out.