Thailand has stepped up its defences. Following a confirmed outbreak of the potentially deadly Nipah virus in West Bengal, India, enhanced disease-control measures are now in force at Suvarnabhumi, Don Mueang and Phuket airports. The Department of Disease Control (DDC) announced on Sunday that international communicable disease officers have begun intensified screening of inbound passengers — with extra attention on travellers arriving from West Bengal.
What travellers can expect at the airports
If you’re landing at Suvarnabhumi, passing through Don Mueang or touching down in Phuket, you’ll notice a visible ramp-up in public-health activity. Screening procedures include temperature checks and on-site clinical assessments for anyone who looks unwell. Passengers who present with a high fever or symptoms suggestive of Nipah infection will be escorted to designated quarantine centres for further evaluation under established DDC protocols.
In addition to screening, travellers arriving from West Bengal are being handed Health Beware Cards. These cards outline the symptoms to watch for and explain what to do if illness develops after arrival — including how to report concerns and get help fast.
Know the symptoms — and act quickly
Recognition matters. The DDC lists symptoms associated with the Nipah virus to include:
- Fever
- Severe headache and muscle pain
- Sore throat, cough and breathing difficulties
- Drowsiness, confusion and seizures
If symptoms appear within 21 days of arriving in Thailand, the DDC urges travellers to seek medical attention immediately. When you visit a healthcare provider, be sure to tell them your travel history and the date your symptoms began — details that help clinicians make quick, informed decisions.
How to report symptoms and get help
The Health Beware Card contains a QR code for digital reporting and clear instructions on how to get help. You can also call the DDC hotline at 1422 for guidance; the hotline operates daily from 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. If you feel unwell after returning from India — even with mild fever, headache, fatigue, cough or neurological signs — contact the DDC without delay.
Advice for Thais travelling to India
The DDC has issued practical advice for Thai citizens travelling to India for tourism or pilgrimage. Key points include:
- Stay informed through official health updates and avoid travel to outbreak zones unless absolutely necessary.
- Avoid direct contact with animals known to carry or transmit Nipah — especially bats, pigs and horses, and domestic animals such as cats, goats and sheep where relevant.
- Wash fruits thoroughly before eating, and always wash hands with soap after contact with animals, meat or carcasses.
These steps are simple but effective ways to reduce personal risk and help prevent onward transmission.
Practical tips for travellers
Travellers can take some extra commonsense precautions to travel smarter during this alert:
- Keep your Health Beware Card with your travel documents, and scan the QR code if you develop symptoms.
- Monitor your health for 21 days after return — set a phone reminder to check temperature and note any new symptoms.
- Inform your accommodation host, tour operator or local contacts if you become unwell so they can help arrange care.
Reporting and cooperation at ports of entry are a critical part of how Thailand protects public health, and the DDC’s measures at Suvarnabhumi, Don Mueang and Phuket airports aim to catch any cases early and stop spread at the border. The move follows reporting by the Bangkok Post and reflects a cautious, proactive public-health approach while investigations continue in West Bengal.
In short: expect screening, carry your Health Beware Card, know the symptoms, and call 1422 (8am–8pm daily) or use the QR code if anything feels off. A little vigilance goes a long way — especially when it keeps the beaches, airports and communities of Thailand safer for everyone.


















Just read this and I fly into Suvarnabhumi next week — honestly anxious but grateful for the screening. The Health Beware Card sounds useful but I wonder how well staff can catch asymptomatic cases. Has anyone experienced the DDC screening recently?
They do temperature checks but those miss a lot, especially early on. Relying heavily on visible screening is comforting but not foolproof. Airports should add clear follow-up pathways for travellers who develop symptoms later.
Temperature screening has low sensitivity for many infections, including Nipah during incubation. The real value is in educating travellers via the Health Beware Card and ensuring rapid contact tracing. Thailand’s DDC protocols are sensible if paired with laboratory surge capacity.
Thanks, Dr. Patel — that eases my mind a bit. Do you know if labs in Phuket are equipped for quick Nipah testing or is everything sent to Bangkok? I hope they don’t bottleneck diagnostics.
This is overkill and will scare off tourists for months, wrecking small businesses. Screening theatre costs money and makes people feel unsafe when what they want is a holiday. The government should balance health with livelihoods.
Saying it’s overkill downplays the seriousness; Nipah has high mortality in some outbreaks. Public health measures prevent much larger economic and human costs. Short-term inconvenience beats a widespread outbreak any day.
I get that, but blanket measures without targeted testing and support will ruin local economies. There must be smarter ways than handing out cards and scaring people at airports. Why can’t they do rapid tests for arrivals from high-risk zones?
Rapid tests for Nipah aren’t widely available like for COVID; lab PCR is the standard and often centralized. Implementing mass rapid testing overnight is unrealistic, which makes awareness and quarantine directives more practical in the short term.
I’m from Kolkata and can confirm local health officials are stretched but actively investigating. West Bengal is cooperating with national authorities but community fear is real and sometimes misdirected. International measures like Thailand’s are understandable but should avoid stigmatizing travellers.
As someone working in Bengal clinics, we need more resources and faster info sharing internationally. Screening at airports helps, but the upstream issue is better outbreak control in source communities. Travel restrictions alone won’t solve the root problems.
Totally — public education at home means fewer exported cases. Also, blaming bats or cheap cultural practices lacks nuance; environmental and socio-economic factors matter. We should be careful with simplistic narratives.
Exactly Meera, and please don’t let fear of animals turn into culls or violence toward communities. Practical advice like washing fruits and avoiding animal contact is sensible without being alarmist.
But if communities don’t change risky behaviors fast, won’t that prolong spread? International screening buys time but local behavior change is essential.
From an epidemiological perspective, Thailand’s targeted screening of passengers from West Bengal is a prudent containment strategy. Early detection, isolation, and contact tracing remain the pillars of outbreak control for high-fatality zoonoses. However, transparency and timely public updates are equally important to maintain trust.
Trust is the key — if people fear quarantine they’ll hide symptoms and travel history. Clear non-punitive reporting systems encourage cooperation. The QR code approach might work if privacy is protected.
Privacy concerns are real, but during a potential outbreak some data sharing is necessary. The issue is oversight: who sees the data and how long is it stored? Governments must be transparent or people will resist.
I am 11 and scared. Does this mean we can’t go to the beach? I hope people won’t get blamed just for coming from India.
Emily, it’s okay to be worried but not panicked; the screening is precautionary and the beaches remain safe with precautions. It’s also important we don’t blame people — public health is about care, not punishment.
Thanks! I feel better knowing it’s just extra checks and not a ban. I will tell my family to keep the Health Beware Card.
As someone who works in tourism promotion, this alert creates real communication challenges for our industry. We support public health measures but need coordinated messaging to avoid panic. Offering clear travel refund policies and local support for quarantined visitors is essential.
Coordinated messaging sounds nice but often governments mumble and private firms drown in noise. Until there’s a single vetted source of truth, misinformation will fill the gap and hurt businesses more than the disease itself.
Skeptic, fair point — we’re pushing for a joint statement with the DDC and airlines to streamline guidance. Clarity reduces rumors and helps travellers plan responsibly.
I’m worried about stigma — people from India might face discrimination at airports or in communities. Health measures must be careful to avoid xenophobia. Education campaigns need to emphasize solidarity and science.
Sometimes people aren’t being racist, they’re being cautious. There’s a difference between stigma and sensible distancing when a disease emerges. But yes, line is thin and officials must tread carefully.
Caution is fine, but we must not let it slide into harassment or deny services to people based solely on origin. History shows that can happen quickly without clear safeguards.
Healthcare staff at airports need PPE, training, and mental health support; screening is stressful work. Also, follow-up systems should ensure people who are quarantined receive care and are not left isolated. Practical logistics matter as much as policy.
What about vaccine development? Has anyone heard of progress on Nipah vaccines or therapeutics? Waiting for labs and hospitals to react every time isn’t sustainable.
There are candidate vaccines in development, but moving from trials to mass deployment takes years and funding. Strengthening surveillance and rapid-response infrastructure remains the most immediate priority while R&D continues.
Even with a vaccine we need cold chains, distribution plans, and prioritization frameworks. Right now, basics like hand hygiene, fruit washing, and avoidance of risky animal contact are achievable and impactful.
Why don’t countries just ban flights from affected regions until everything is clear? It seems more straightforward than screening everyone. Yes it’s disruptive, but it might be cleaner.