Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

NIH: Cruise ship quarantine failed

Americans brought home after virus not contained

- David Oliver

A top health official at the National Institutes of Health shed light on the decision to remove hundreds of American passengers from the coronaviru­s-infected Diamond Princess cruise ship – 14 of whom tested positive for the virus.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health, said the original idea to keep people safely quarantine­d on the ship wasn’t unreasonab­le. But even with the quarantine process on the ship, virus transmissi­on still occurred.

The Japanese health ministry said Monday that the number of cases confirmed aboard the Diamond Princess had reached 454.

“As it turned out, that was very ineffectiv­e in preventing spread on the ship,” Fauci told the USA TODAY Editorial Board and reporters Monday. Every hour, another four or five people were being infected.

The quarantine on the ship was scheduled to end Wednesday, but those who came back to the U.S. a couple of days ahead of the end of the quarantine probably will have to restart the clock on a new 14-day quarantine.

The Princess Cruises ship was carrying 2,666 guests and 1,045 crew when it set sail and was quarantine­d after 10 cases of coronaviru­s were reported Feb. 4. About 380 Americans were on the cruise ship.

“The quarantine process failed,” Fauci said. “I’d like to sugarcoat it and try to be diplomatic about it, but it failed. People were getting infected on that ship. Something went awry in the process of the quarantini­ng on that ship. I don’t know what it was, but a lot of people got infected on that ship.”

Passengers were instructed to stay in their suites or cabins during the quarantine. Those in interior cabins with no window or outdoor access were able to go on deck for up to an hour and a half but were told to stay at least 3 feet from fellow passengers, Matt Smith, a family law attorney from Sacramento, California, told USA TODAY a few days into the quarantine. Meals were dropped off at the door by the ship’s crew.

The crew also distribute­d masks and thermomete­rs, and passengers were asked to take their temperatur­es and report readings above 99.5 degrees, Smith said. Common coronaviru­s symptoms include fever, cough and shortness of breath.

The State Department coordinate­d with the Department of Health and Human Services and other agencies to bring passengers back to the U.S. It was a tough call to make in the first place, but it grew tougher once 14 passengers tested positive for the virus.

The passengers had been thought to be negative and put into the evacuation process. As they were on the bus getting ready to leave, tests came back positive.

Fauci explained there was a choice: Should these people stay in Japan, or should they be flown home?

Passengers ultimately boarded flights home. The infected and the uninfected flew in separate areas of the plane. The infected were in an area Fauci described as similar to a containmen­t laboratory.

To call the situation stressful would be an understate­ment.

“Many of them were elderly; many of them had underlying conditions,” Fauci said. “They just wanted to get home, and we felt it was safe enough on the plane to get them home without infecting anybody else.”

Fauci said health officials were expecting more positive tests, and he wouldn’t be surprised if the number of infected evacuees rises.

Not all passengers opted to leave the ship. Smith told USA TODAY he was not planning to take the charter flight back to the U.S.

“We think the way they are handling this is not safe,” Smith said Saturday. “They want to take hundreds of people off the ship before the quarantine here has been completed and without them ever being tested, and they want to throw them on buses together, then a plane, then force them to serve another 14-day quarantine under unknown circumstan­ces.”

 ?? WILLIAM LUTHER /SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS VIA AP ?? Americans evacuated from a cruise ship in Japan arrive in San Antonio, Texas, early Monday. They will begin a new 14-day quarantine period.
WILLIAM LUTHER /SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS VIA AP Americans evacuated from a cruise ship in Japan arrive in San Antonio, Texas, early Monday. They will begin a new 14-day quarantine period.

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