Three ships operating in different parts of the world are all reporting cases of food poisoning among their crew, reports the Maritime Executive.
What happened?
- At least two crew members have died while others have been transferred from their ships and hospitalized.
- It might be coincidental or an outbreak of the more common norovirus, a common gastrointestinal disease, but it rarely causes deaths.
First Ship
- The Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the Maldives reported the first cases at the beginning of February.
- A 22,641 dwt Thai bulk carrier, the Lanna Nare, was sailing from Australia to Sri Lanka on a voyage that was continuing to San Juan, Puerto Rico with a crew of 18 on board.
- The vessel changed course and requested medical assistance from the Maldives, arriving in Male on February 9.
- With the coordination of the Royal Thai Embassy in Colombo, 13 sick crew members were transferred to a hospital where it was determined that they were suffering from food poisoning.
- The ship’s cook reportedly died while in the Maldives.
- The Ministry reported that it assisted with a crew change facilitating the 18 crew members returning to Thailand and a new crew arrived for the vessel.
- The Lanna Nare departed the following day on February 11 while the authorities continued to investigate to pinpoint the cause of the food poisoning.
The Second Ship
- Around the same time, a Singapore-flagged bulk carrier, the Thor Magnhild, arrived at Trois-Rivières, along the St. Lawrence River in Canada also requesting medical assistance.
- The Canadian health authorities reported that 17 crew members were being treated with gastrointestinal disorders but did not specify the cause.
- While registered in Singapore, the vessel has recently been sailing between Brazil, the Caribbean, and Canada.
The Third Ship
- Last Friday, February 19, a third vessel, a smaller cargo ship, the 1,963 dwt April registered in Panama and operating on the Black Sea also requested medical assistance.
- Again, they were reporting that the crew was suffering from poisoning.
- At the time, the vessel was heading towards Turkey when they reported that five crew members were ill and one died.
- Russian authorities attempted to evacuate the ill crew but due to bad weather the ship was anchoring.
- Officials from Rosmorrechflot later reported that they suspected food poisoning as the cause of the illness after ruling out other causes including a possible chemical leak or cargo fumigation.
- Alcohol poisoning was also mentioned as a possible cause. In this latest instance, two crew members reportedly were not ill and the authorities were looking to differences in their activities versus the crewmembers that became ill.
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Source: The Maritime Executive