Posted on 02/21/2020 11:31:30 AM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Most of the Americans monitored at the University of Nebraska Medical Center for coronavirus after evacuating a cruise ship in Japan tested positive for the virus, the Omaha World-Herald reports.
UMNC said in a statement Thursday that the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention verified the Nebraska Public Health Lab results showing that 11 of the 13 patients have the novel coronavirus. The other two evacuees who were taken to the Omaha hospital tested negative, the statement said.
(Excerpt) Read more at siouxcityjournal.com ...
This would not have happened if Captain Stubing was around.
https://tinyurl.com/sczju3x
Any mass transit vehicle can become a petri disease on wheels container!
This virus can live for days (do know exactly how many days) after someone sneezes, coughs, breathes, passes gas or got on the vehicle with dirty hands and pants/skirts.
I agree. That was dumb. Written by a person who is deliberately slanting the coverage or, more likely, an editor who doesn’t have the discernment to write properly.
Even if cabins were sharing ventilation air (which they weren’t), no one realized in the beginning that true airborne transmission of the virus was possible.
“Tbis thing has sars like elements”
Not just SARS-like elements, it basically is evolved SARS.
Well ;
Have limited info
But all of this stinks
Stinks to high heaven!
Agreed;
So... what about the other 300 people on the flight?
“Each cabin intakes and exhausts air separately”
Admittedly, I only served on six ships. And, admittedly, they were Navy ships and not luxury liners. However, I just don’t see how that could be done.
COVID-19 , SARS and MERS
if the virus is not spread by the air conditioning, crew, or food, then i wonder if it is spread by the ship’s sewage system. does anyone know if the ship’s sewage system allows virus transmission between cabins? is sewage water recycled and if so is it first strained and/or sterilized to kill all viruses?
one way in which the japanese government could finesse the onboard quarantine is if they first asked princess cruises if the ship could safely isolate passengers in their cabins. given such a question, princess could respond either yes or no. however, if they responded no, they would have immediately had to junk all of their cruise ships as being unsafe. therefore, princess would have responded yes. this perhaps would have effectively shifted ultimate responsibility for passenger safety from japan to princess, regardless of day to day appearances. at some later time japan could simply deny responsibility and quote princess cruises’ response to it at a later date.
if i recall the rough chronology, the ship was being quarantined at about the time that multistory apartment sewage system spread was first announced, plus or minus a couple of days. does anyone recall the timeline?
Very easily. The heat/chill medium is central and runs off ship power. The liquid coolant circulates through the ship to heat exchangers in each room. Air circulation is a simple fan/duct arrangement from outside air and back, probably with some kind of particle filtration in the air loop. Zero possibility of bacterial/viral cross-contamination.
Navy ships have totally different requirements.
If a ship has a thousand cabins, that means a thousand fans, a thousand heat exchangers, and how many miles of pressurized pipe and air ducting.
Yup, and this is no different from the miles of electric wiring, toilet plumbing, and other utilities installed to service the 1000 cabins. Actually, there probably needs to be two pressurized loops, one for cooling and one for heat in order to have full climate control. That piping probably runs in the same conduit routes as the electric.
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