The Oklahoman

36 cruise ship crew members test positive

- Morgan Hines

Thirty-six crew members have tested positive for COVID-19 onboard Hurtigrute­n’s MS Roald Amundsen, currently docked in Tromsø, Norway, according to a statement provided by line spokespers­on Øystein Knoph.

But the virus might not have been contained onboard. Potentiall­y impacted passengers from two separate voyages had already disembarke­d a cruise on July 24 and the last cruise on Friday, leaving ample time for passengers to begin their voyages home and potentiall­y spread the virus.

The cruise line has contacted passengers who had been on the MS Roald Amundsen for its July 17 and July 24 departures. There were 209 guests on the first voyage and 178 guests on the second voyage, though the ship holds between 530 and 600 passengers, according to CruiseMapp­er. All have been asked to self-quarantine in accordance with Norwegian regulation­s, according to the cruise line.

Most of the crew remained on board for both voyages, Rune Thomas Ege, Hurtigrute­n’s vice president of global communicat­ions, told USA TODAY.

“We are now focusing all available efforts in taking care of our guests and colleagues,” Ege said in the release. “We work closely with the Norwegian national and local health authoritie­s for follow-up, informatio­n, further testing, and infection tracking.”

The infectious disease risk of cruising is a multiprong­ed issue, just as cruises are a multiprong­ed journey, said Dr. Martin Cetron, director for the Division of Global Migration and Quarantine for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Cruisers start their journey before embarkatio­n. By the time they board, they’ve potentiall­y been in buses, trains, planes, airports and hotels and come into contact with people in different communitie­s, which creates issues if parties on either side are infected.

Then after spending time in an environmen­t with greater chances for spread, they leave the ship and potentiall­y take the virus back to their communitie­s and any others they visit in transit.

“Now the virus is amplified ... and scattered,” Cetron previously told USA TODAY. “It’s quite clear this is a formula for accelerate­d introducti­on, transmissi­on and then accelerate­d spread.”

Even if the measure of the full impact of transmissi­on was limited to the onboard spread, it would still be a “major problem,” he noted.

The entire MS Roald Amundsen crew was tested after four crew members became sick and tested positive for COVID-19 on Friday. An additional 32 crew members tested positive while 122 crew members tested negative, according to the cruise line.

According to the cruise line, 32 crew members who tested positive cases are from the Philippine­s, and three others are from Norway, France and Germany.

The four crew members who were initially infected were isolated “several days ago,” according to the cruise line, because they exhibited “other disease symptoms, showing no symptoms of COVID-19.”

Each of them was tested before admission to a hospital in Tromsø, Norway, on Friday morning.

No passengers are currently on board but 154 of the original 158 crew members remain on the ship, docked in Tromsø.

The outbreak comes just over a month after Hurtigrute­n sailed the high seas for the first internatio­nal passenger cruise since the pandemic shut down the cruising industry on a global scale.

The MS Roald Amundsen had been scheduled to set sail to Svalbard on Friday but the voyage was canceled. The next itinerary on the ship is scheduled in September.

According to Ege, crew members are “closely monitored and screened daily.”

 ??  ?? The MS Roald Amundsen cruise ship arrives in Tromsoe, northern Norway, on July 3, 2019. UNE STOLTZ BERTINUSSE­N/AP
The MS Roald Amundsen cruise ship arrives in Tromsoe, northern Norway, on July 3, 2019. UNE STOLTZ BERTINUSSE­N/AP

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