Cruise ship testing reveals a lot more people had coronavirus without symptoms
by Harrison JonesIt may be more common than previously thought to have coronavirus but show no symptoms.
That’s according to a new study of people isolated on a cruise ship during the Covid-19 pandemic which could have an impact on the easing of lockdowns around the world.
More than 80% of those on board the unnamed cruise ship who tested positive for the virus were asymptomatic. Previous research has been divided on the likely number of asymptomatic patients – with a prediction from a key Imperial College London professor in March suggesting it could be around 40% in the UK.
The new study, published in the journal Thorax, concluded that the prevalence of the virus on affected cruise ships is therefore likely to be ‘significantly underestimated’. Australia-based researchers added that ‘strategies are needed to assess and monitor all passengers to prevent community transmission after disembarkation.’
Professor Alan Smyth, joint editor in chief of the journal, said the study’s results could have implications for the easing of lockdown restrictions if more people than previously thought have already had the virus.
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Of the 217 passengers and crew on board, 128 tested positive for the virus and of those, 104 patients – 81% – did not have symptoms.
Professor Smyth said: ‘It is difficult to find a reliable estimate of the number of Covid positive patients who have no symptoms.
‘In early March, WHO suggested the figure might be only 1%, very different from the 81% figure found on the cruise ship.’
He continued: ‘As countries progress out of lockdown, a high proportion of infected but asymptomatic individuals may mean that a much higher percentage of the population than expected may have been infected with Covid.
‘These individuals may have immunity to Covid. This demonstrates the urgent need for accurate seroprevalence studies to estimate the overall population infection rate across the globe.’
The ship left in mid-March from Argentina for a planned 21-day cruise of the Antarctic, along a similar route taken by explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton in the early 1900s.
It set sail after the global pandemic was declared by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and two of the study authors happened to be passengers, while a third was the expedition physician.
Passengers and crew were screened for Covid-19 symptoms, body temperatures were taken before boarding, and no-one who had recently travelled through countries with high infection rates at the time such as China and South Korea was allowed on.
The first recorded fever on board the ship was on day eight and the study authors said from that point all passengers were confined to their cabins and surgical masks were issued, while full personal protective equipment was used for any contact with any patients with a fever.
Eight people had to be medically evacuated from the ship and the authors said there had been one death to date.
The Uruguayan government and Ministry of Health provided a ‘sanitary corridor’ for the repatriation of 112 Australian and Kiwi passengers on day 28 and for all other passengers on day 32.
Researchers from the faculty of medicine and health sciences at Macquarie University, the oncology trials unit at Sunshine Coast University Hospital and the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners believe their study to be the first instance of complete Covid-19 testing of all passengers and crew on an isolated cruise ship.
It remains unclear what level of immunity people develop once they have had Covid-19.
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