Emerging Infectious Diseases (Sep 2021)

Epidemiology of Coronavirus Disease Outbreak among Crewmembers on Cruise Ship, Nagasaki City, Japan, April 2020

  • Haruka Maeda,
  • Eiichiro Sando,
  • Michiko Toizumi,
  • Yuzo Arima,
  • Tomoe Shimada,
  • Takeshi Tanaka,
  • Masato Tashiro,
  • Ayumi Fujita,
  • Katsunori Yanagihara,
  • Hayato Takayama,
  • Ikkoh Yasuda,
  • Nobuyuki Kawachi,
  • Yoshitaka Kohayagawa,
  • Maiko Hasegawa,
  • Katsuaki Motomura,
  • Rie Fujita,
  • Katsumi Nakata,
  • Jiro Yasuda,
  • Koichi Morita,
  • Shigeru Kohno,
  • Koichi Izumikawa,
  • Motoi Suzuki,
  • Konosuke Morimoto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2709.204596
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 9
pp. 2251 – 2260

Abstract

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In April 2020, a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak occurred on the cruise ship Costa Atlantica in Nagasaki, Japan. Our outbreak investigation included 623 multinational crewmembers onboard on April 20. Median age was 31 years; 84% were men. Each crewmember was isolated or quarantined in a single room inside the ship, and monitoring of health status was supported by a remote health monitoring system. Crewmembers with more severe illness were hospitalized. The investigation found that the outbreak started in late March and peaked in late April, resulting in 149 laboratory-confirmed and 107 probable cases of infection with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. Six case-patients were hospitalized for COVID-19 pneumonia, including 1 in severe condition and 2 who required oxygen administration, but no deaths occurred. Although the virus can spread rapidly on a cruise ship, we describe how prompt isolation and quarantine combined with a sensitive syndromic surveillance system can control a COVID-19 outbreak.

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