Healthy Sailing
Large passenger ships including cruise ships, ferries and expedition vessels can be characterized as semi-closed, crowded environments where international travellers gather and frequent interaction can occur. In these settings, infectious diseases can spread easily if effective detection and control measures are not in place. Prior to the emergence of COVID-19, cruise ships’ health and hygiene programmes focused on gastroenteritis prevention and control, while European guidelines for passenger ships addressed prevention and management of infectious diseases such as gastroenteritis, Legionnaires’ disease, influenza and vaccine-preventable diseases. Even though health and hygiene standards were rigorously implemented, the COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated the inability of existing passenger ship policies and protocols to detect emerging diseases in a timely manner and respond effectively. Expected and extraordinary events such as COVID-19 impact the health of travellers and communities, as well as the entire passenger shipping sector, often creating severe economic consequences. The pandemic revealed the necessity of an integrated approach to address known, expected and new emerging infectious diseases that may occur on large passenger ships.
HEALTHY SAILING provides this integrated approach, facilitating the development of evidence-informed guidelines and policies that incorporate infectious disease prevention, mitigation and management measures into routine operations by governmental authorities, the transport industry and the wider global community. The project will provide an evidence base regarding the effectiveness of proposed measures for infectious disease prevention, mitigation and management on board passenger ships.
More information about the project can be found at the project website.