Journal Pioneer

‘Don’t blow things out of proportion’

Canadians who caught coronaviru­s say they barely felt they were affected

- TOM BLACKWELL

For Canadian Craig Lee, possibly the worst symptom of the new coronaviru­s came on a bus that took him to a Japanese quarantine centre.

Wrapped up in a winter coat, wearing a face mask and surrounded by other cruise-ship passengers, he felt decidedly claustroph­obic.

But through the 16 days after Lee first tested positive for the virus, he experience­d no other ill effects — apart from being away from his wife and son in Richmond Hill, Ont.

The infectious disease hat has now been classified as a pandemic is striking fear throughout the world, not least because it has caused thousands of deaths, mostly among the elderly and unwell.

But for some Canadians who contracted SARSCoV-2, the pathogen has been little more than an inconvenie­nce.

“We felt perfectly fine, perfectly normal,” said Rose Yerex, 66, of Port Dover, Ont., who like Lee was infected on the Diamond Princess ship that became an inadverten­t incubator for the virus. “We would have had no idea.”

Most of the 3,700 Diamond Princess passengers and crew were kept on the vessel for days after it docked in Yokohama, Japan, as the number of infected grew eventually to over 700. Of those, seven people died, all in their 70s and 80s.

But Lee said he heard that 80 per cent of the cruisers who tested positive were asymptomat­ic like him, Yerex and her husband. Researcher­s have reported that about half of the infected passengers never got sick.

Lee said his experience tells him that Canadians should be vigilant and follow the guidance of publicheal­th authoritie­s, but not panic.

“Be prudent. Don’t blow things out of proportion,” he said. “You don’t need to get three months’ worth of toilet paper.… You can get over it fairly easily.”

The Diamond Princess onboard-quarantine began after a passenger disembarke­d in Hong Kong and was diagnosed with the new virus.

Lee, 72, and his travelling companion were confined for days to their inside cabin — ie. with no window — and allowed periodic outings on deck.

Finally, a swab from inside his mouth came back positive for SARS-CoV-2 on Feb. 15.

“My heart just sank,” he said. “I wrote to the (Canadian) embassy saying ‘I have no symptoms, I have an appetite, I exercise, I sleep well, I have no temperatur­e, and I have a wife at home who is mobility challenged and a son who is autistic. I need to get home.’ ”

Officials said he was out of luck until his infection ended. But both he and his friend — who never tested positive — were allowed off the ship and put on a bus to a newly built but empty clinic in Nagoya, 300 kilometres west of

Tokyo.

They travelled in a convoy that included trailers with mobile bathrooms, which they had to use instead of public facilities at a rest stop two hours into the trip.

Everyone on the bus and on Lee’s floor at the clinic was asymptomat­ic.

Travel mates were accommodat­ed on another floor of the facility.

He never did get sick. Every day, a nurse would measure his oxygen saturation level — an indicator of how effectivel­y the lungs are supplying oxygen to red blood cells. The readings were never less than optimal, he said.

 ?? HANDOUT ?? Rose and Greg Yerex at a quarantine centre in Nagoya, Japan, after becoming infected with the new coronaviru­s.
HANDOUT Rose and Greg Yerex at a quarantine centre in Nagoya, Japan, after becoming infected with the new coronaviru­s.

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