Guest guest Posted January 27, 2007 Report Share Posted January 27, 2007 Norovirus hits cruise ship, may be new strain Updated Thu. Jan. 25 2007 9:48 AM ET CTV.ca News Staff With yet another report of an outbreak of norovirus, this time on a cruise ship, there are some disease experts who are wondering whether the virus affecting so many this year is a new strain. The latest outbreak involves the famed Queen 2 cruise ship, where almost one in five of the ship's 1,600 passengers have fallen ill with the highly contagious stomach bug. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that 276 passengers and 28 crew members have come down with norovirus since Jan. 8. The ship's operators believe that a passenger who boarded the ship in New York likely brought the bug aboard. It's just the latest outbreak of a nasty strain of norovirus that has been causing severe stomach illness across Canada and the northeastern U.S., in an outbreak that health officials are calling one of the worst in years. It has affected hospitals, nursing homes and other health facilities, hitting patients with severe diarrhea, vomiting, nausea and stomach cramps that can last several days. The virus is suspected to be a new strain of Norwalk, a virus within the norovirus group. " There's a debate as to whether it's a more virulent strain in terms of its ability to infect a greater percentage of people in a given outbreak, " infectious disease expert Neil Rau told Canada AM. " Even this Queen 2 outbreak, you have about 17 per cent of the people affected on that ship -- that's more than the usual say five to 10 per cent that is sometimes described. " Rau points out that cruise ships are ideal breeding grounds for noroviruses because of the close quarters. " You've got elevator buttons, staircase rails, buffet spoons, common bathrooms. So if one person is sick, they can contaminate an entire bathroom, " he says. " Noroviruses are really hard to disinfect from surfaces. You can get it not just from person-to-person contact but by touching common surfaces. " " You need great cleaning to get rid of it and there's only so much that's practical, unless you have amazing staffing ratios where you can have people cleaning a bathroom every hour. " CDC officials boarded the QE2 on Friday in Acapulco, Mexico, to investigate the outbreak. They determined the emergency sanitation measures put in place by the ship's crew, from disinfecting casino chips to halting self-service at the ship's buffet, were containing the outbreak. The ship is now on its way to Hawaii. Rau points out that there is little that can be done to treat a norovirus infection beyond offering comfort. " We call it supportive care, which is a way of saying, 'Just hang if there and we'll make you feel better.' " He says the bigger risk for the elderly -- who are often the most common patron of cruises -- is dehydration, especially when temperatures in tropical areas can reach above 30 degrees Celsius. Beyond the usual advice of thoroughly washing your hands often, there is no clinical way to prevent norovirus. " There's no vaccine that's going to be available because it's not just one virus, it's a group of viruses and they shift a little bit each year or drift away each year, " he says. " So an infection this year doesn't mean you're going to be protected even six months from now. It's a very short-term immunity. " http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20070125/norovirus_070125/20\ 070125?hub=TopStories Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.