Hawke's Bay Today

Covid outbreak at remote Antarctic research station

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Polar researcher­s in Antarctica have contracted coronaviru­s despite being fully vaccinated and living miles from civilisati­on.

Two thirds of the 25 staff based at Belgium’s Princess Elisabeth Polar Station have caught the virus, Le Soir newspaper reported.

The outbreak took hold despite all staff passing multiple PCR tests, quarantini­ng and living in one of the most remote places in the world.

The situation has echoes of the plot of John Carpenter’s 1982 horror classic The Thing, which was advertised on posters with the warning “man is the warmest place to hide”. An alien life form infects workers on an Antarctic station in the cult sci-fi thriller starring Kurt Russell.

None of the infected Belgians have exhibited any severe symptoms.

All 25 researcher­s were fully vaccinated and one had a booster shot. Before leaving for the station, they had PCR tests in Belgium two hours before flying to South Africa. In Cape Town they quarantine­d for 10 days and took another PCR test. A further test was needed when leaving for Antarctica and a final one five days after that.

One person tested positive seven days after arriving at the station on December 14 and was placed in isolation but tests revealed two others had caught the virus. All three left the station on December 23 but the virus has continued to spread.

It is thought to be the Omicron variant, responsibl­e for 99 per cent of infections in South Africa.

There are two emergency doctors at the station, which will not allow any new arrivals until the virus dissipates.

Belgium’s Polar Secretaria­t has now shortened the research season.

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