Americans stranded on a coronavirus-stricken cruise ship have revealed they are confined to their rooms as they anxiously await test results while held off the coast of San Francisco.
The Grand Princess with some 2,300 passengers on board, mostly Americans, and another 1,000 crew members, was ordered to stay at sea on Thursday.
It follows the death of a Sacramento-area man who succumbed to the coronavirus after he had been on an earlier sailing of the ship, in February. Two other passengers from that voyage have been hospitalized with the virus in Northern California, and two Canadians who recently sailed aboard the ship tested positive after returning home, officials said.
The US Coast Guard yesterday flew in testing kits for those on board who have been told to stay in their rooms and only leave if absolutely necessary.
Medics collected samples for testing from 45 people aboard after some showed symptoms. These have been flown to a lab in Richmond, according to the cruise line.
One passenger Gina Pallotta, who is on board with her husband Mike Neky, told the Modesto Bee: ‘There are some people who don’t seem to understand the gravity of what is going on, and others who fully understand.’
The US Coast Guard yesterday flew in testing kits for those on board who have been told to stay in their rooms and only leave if absolutely necessary
Medical personnel Guardian Angels with the 129th Rescue Wing, alongside individuals from the CDC don full personal protective equipment as they prepare to test travelers on the Grand Princess cruise ship for the coronavirus currently off the coast of California, U.S. in this handout photograph obtained on March 5, 2020
A National Guard helicopter delivering virus testing kits lowers crew down to the Grand Princess cruise ship Thursday, March 5, 2020
First, the food buffet was shut down as gloved staff scurried about wiping every surface in sight. Then the ocean liner’s gym, bar, casino and boutiques were closed, with passengers urged to keep to themselves. Finally, they were confined to their staterooms.
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Once the captain announced their vessel may be tainted with coronavirus, Grand Princess cruise ship guests like Kathleen Reid were left with little to do but contemplate the prospect of extended isolation at sea, or worse.
‘My first reaction was, ‘Oh, crap. We’re going to be quarantined, and maybe get sick,” Reid, 67, a retiree from Granbury, Texas said. ‘We don’t know what’s happening, so we’re just kind of in limbo, waiting.’
Like the Diamond Princess, the liner held in quarantine off Japan last month, the Grand Princess is owned by a unit of Carnival Corp, the world’s largest cruise operator.
Experts have criticized Japanese bureaucrats’ handling of the onboard quarantine, as ultimately about 700 people were infected and six have died in what was at the time the largest concentration of coronavirus cases outside China.
California Governor Gavin Newsom insisted that the Grand Princess remain at sea until passengers and crew complaining of flu-like symptoms during a 15-day roundtrip cruise to Hawaii could be tested for possible coronavirus infection.
Medical personnel Guardian Angels with the 129th Rescue Wing, alongside individuals from the CDC don full personal protective equipment as they prepare to test travelers on the Grand Princess cruise ship for the coronavirus currently off the coast of California
The Grand Princess is currently 400 miles off San Francisco and heading for port having returned from Hawaii after 11 passengers and 10 crew reported symptoms of coronavirus
On Thursday, the U.S. Coast Guard airlifted a batch of diagnostic kits to the ship via helicopter, and public health officials said samples collected would be flown back to a San Francisco Bay Area state laboratory for testing.
Results were expected in about 24 hours, said Mary Ellen Carroll, executive director of the city’s Department of Emergency Management.
State and local officials acted after learning that 35 people aboard the ship had fallen ill, and that two passengers who had traveled on the same vessel for a voyage last month between San Francisco and Mexico later tested positive for coronavirus.
One, an elderly man from Placer County near Sacramento with underlying health conditions, died this week, marking the first documented coronavirus fatality in California. The other, from the Bay area, was described by Newsom as gravely sick.
Health officials say both individuals likely contracted the virus while they were aboard the ocean liner.
The Princess cruise line said fewer than 100 passengers and crew from the Hawaii voyage of its Grand Princess have been identified for testing, including those who were ill.
Tests will also be given to dozens of holdover passengers from the Mexico trip who stayed on the ship for the voyage to Hawaii, as well as ‘guests currently under care for respiratory illness,’ the cruise line said in a statement. They will remain quarantined on the ship until cleared by medical staff.
Specialists from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) were working with local health authorities and the Coast Guard to coordinate the operation.
They also were seeking to contact some 2,500 passengers who disembarked in San Francisco on Feb. 21 after the earlier cruise to Mexico. One of them, a Canadian woman from the province of Alberta, tested positive for the virus this week, health officials there said.
Princess Cruises has canceled the next scheduled departure of its Grand Princess Hawaii voyage from San Francisco, which had been set for March 7.
Passengers on the current cruise, meanwhile, were forced to make do with a rapidly shrinking choice of amusements.
Having already lost access to many of the ship’s favorite attractions – the bar, casino, shops, food buffet and gym – guests were also urged to practice ‘social distancing,’ making an effort to keep at least six feet away from strangers on the ship, the company said. By midday on Thursday, they were asked to confine themselves to their staterooms until further notice.
It was unclear what would occur should anyone now aboard the ship test positive for the respiratory virus, which has infected more than 95,000 people worldwide, most of them in China, where the outbreak originated.
‘Once we have results from the tests, the CDC and the state will determine the most appropriate location for the ship to berth, and the location needs to provide for the safety of the surrounding community as well as the passengers and crew,’ Carroll told reporters on Thursday.
The Coast Guard approaches the Grand Princess cruise ship to deliver test kits to more than 3,500 people stranded on the ship about 400 miles of the coast of San Francisco
An employee sprays down the common areas of the Grand Princess cruise ship with disinfectant
The US death toll from the coronavirus climbed to 12 on Thursday. At least 216 cases have been confirmed across 18 states
She said the ship might be directed to an arrival point other than San Francisco.
Reid, who is traveling with her husband, said the ship’s captain was keeping passengers informed of developments throughout the day with announcements every couple of hours, and that fellow guests seemed to be taking the uncertainty mostly in stride.
‘People are, I’m sure, a little anxious, but nobody has just gone screaming mad yet,’ Reid said, adding she had seen no obvious signs of anyone being sick.
‘Hand-washing is a big deal,’ she said, but ‘nobody is walking around sneezing or coughing.’