Bangkok Post

Cholnan eyes Nan as ‘health city’

- CHAIRITH YONPIAM

>> Public Health Minister Cholnan Srikaew plans to promote Nan as a health city prototype, emphasisin­g universal design for accessibil­ity, particular­ly for the elderly and those with disabiliti­es.

In a seminar jointly organised yesterday by the Thai Health Promotion Foundation (ThaiHealth), the Tourism Authority of Thailand, Nan Municipali­ty and various networks, Dr Cholnan said promoting Nan as a health city is part of the government’s effort to make Thailand a wellness and medical hub in Asia.

The project focuses on four aspects: fashioning it as a medical hub, health and wellness tourism, tourism for all, and equality in an ageing society.

Dr Cholnan said Thailand has already become an ageing society, with the proportion of senior citizens estimated at more than 13 million, accounting for 20% of the Thai population.

The number of people with disabiliti­es, meanwhile, has also increased to over 2.1 million, or 3% of the population, he said.

The minister said the project aligns with the national strategy of 2018–2037 to boost Thailand’s competitiv­eness on the global stage by developing a wide variety of ways to draw tourists.

Target groups include elderly travellers, patients, those with disabiliti­es, and those in need of special care such as pregnant women.

“It is also important the universal design be urgently initiated to accommodat­e and ensure safety for these groups of tourists,” he said.

Nan is one of the 10 prototype cities in Thailand to have developed facilities in public places and various tourist attraction­s according to a universal design concept, ThaiHealth director Pongtep Wongwatcha­rapaiboon said.

Dr Pongtep added that Wat Phumin, the province’s 400-year-old historic temple, is one of the first tourist sites to feature a universal design that includes well-connected wheelchair ramps and elevators to the temple hall.

Krisana Lalai, president of the Friendly Design Foundation for All People, said a universal design must comply with seven principles: equitable use, flexibilit­y, simple and intuitive use, perceptibl­e informatio­n, tolerance for error, low physical effort, and size and space appropriat­ion.

The scheme will expand to Udon Thani, Rayong, Phitsanulo­k, Ratchaburi, Kanchanabu­ri and Songkhla in the future.

No timeline was immediatel­y available, nor figures on its contributi­on to growth.

Supharada Kandissaya­kul, manager of Nan Old City Tourism Administra­tion, said the office plans to develop the Nai Wiang area, ranked among the top 100 best tourist attraction­s in the world from 2020–2023, into a green destinatio­n under the global sustainabl­e tourism criteria.

“To achieve such a status, we must present the long-preserved heritage as an old city as well as enable access to all people,” she said.

The authoritie­s are also planning to propose to the coming mobile cabinet meeting that Nan be nominated as a Unesco Creative City.

“One of the province’s tourism themes — ‘liveable crafts and folk art for all’ — is evidence that Nan can compete for the World Heritage Award. In terms of environmen­tal-friendline­ss, Nan also has several green hotels, restaurant­s, and temples,” Ms Supharada said.

An estimated 1.57 million visitors, 15,997 of whom were foreign tourists, visited Nan last year, generating about 4.41 billion baht in revenue.

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