Just come back from a cruise? Stay home for two weeks, CDC says

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has warned travellers who went on a cruise to stay home for two weeks. Picture: Pixabay.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has warned travellers who went on a cruise to stay home for two weeks. Picture: Pixabay.

Published Mar 24, 2020

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No one is taking a cruise anytime soon, with operations halted around the globe amid the spread of the novel coronavirus. But many thousands of people were on ships before they stopped sailing - and now the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has a warning for them.

"Stay home for 14 days from the time you disembark, practice social distancing and monitor your health," the agency said Tuesday. "Social distancing means staying out of crowded places, avoiding group gatherings, and maintaining distance (approximately six feet or two meters) from others when possible."

Representatives for the two largest cruise operators, Carnival and Royal Caribbean Cruises, did not immediately respond to a question about whether the lines were communicating the CDC's advice to recent passengers.

The CDC's recommendation came in a new travel warning Tuesday that raises cruising to a Level 3 - "avoid nonessential travel" - status. The agency recommends that travelers put off all cruise travel around the world, though it does not give a timeline for when it would be safe to start again. Most lines have cancelled sailings until at least early April.

"Cruise passengers are at increased risk of person-to-person spread of infectious diseases, including covid-19, and outbreaks of covid-19 have been reported on several cruise ships," the warning said, referring to the disease caused by the virus.

At least nine oceangoing cruise ships have had confirmed cases of coronavirus onboard since late January, as well as several river cruises in the Nile.

It wasn't immediately clear how many people had taken a cruise in the past two weeks; according to the Cruise Lines International Association, there were expected to be at least 272 ocean cruise ships sailing around the world by the end of 2019. Last year, an estimated 30 million people took a cruise.

The four largest cruise ships in the world alone, operated by Royal Caribbean International, would have been able to sail with more than 44,000 passengers over the past two weeks.

The Washington Post 

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