Cruise ship stopped from disembarking in France over likely stomach flu outbreak


PARIS, May 13 (Reuters) - Local ⁠authorities in southwest France stopped passengers and crew from disembarking ⁠a cruise ship in Bordeaux on Wednesday, as a precautionary ‌measure after dozens of cases of possible gastroenteritis on board.

There is no reason to link what looks like a stomach flu outbreak on a ship that came ​from Belfast and Liverpool with the hantavirus ⁠cluster on the luxury Hondius ⁠ship that travelled between Argentina and the Canary Islands, the regional health ⁠authority ‌said in a statement.

One passenger has died, French media, including BFM TV, said.

The ban on disembarking passengers is temporary ⁠and pending the outcome of medical tests, officials ​said.

The ship's operator, Ambassador ‌Cruise Line, said in a Facebook post that enhanced sanitation ⁠and prevention ​protocols had immediately been implemented on the vessel, named the Ambition. "Once clearance is granted, guests will be permitted to disembark," it said.

French media said ⁠there are 1,700 people on board.

Gastrointestinal illnesses can ​be common on cruise ships. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has reported two outbreaks of E.coli and two outbreaks of ⁠norovirus this year already on cruise ships.

Gastroenteritis is a stomach flu. The main symptoms include vomiting and diarrhea. It is very contagious but usually does not have major consequences, though it can sometimes lead ​to more severe symptoms including dehydration.

That is ⁠very different from the hantavirus, which has a high lethality rate but ​transmits from person to person only in ‌rare cases and requires close contact.

(Reporting ​by Makini Brice and Charlotte Van Campenhout, additional reporting by Jennifer Rigby; Writing by Ingrid Melander; Editing by Toby Chopra)

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