EILIF DAHL Background Like medicine in general, as well as the cruise industry itself, cruise ship medicine has developed tremendously during the last 30 years. Progress has not happened because ...
... research is focused on epidemiology of infectious disease related to cross-border health threats, maritime health, water safety and health and hygiene on cruise ships. She has been working as the manager ...
Prof. Dr. Hans-Joachim Jensen PROFESSIONAL PROFILE 5 years ship officer in merchant navy. Professor at the Flensburg University of Applied Science. ...
... Examination of Seafarers. He is actively involved in formulating medical standards for maritime industry stakeholders and collaborates with the worlds’ major cruise lines and merchant shipping companies ...
... medicine (Bergen 2008-2012). Part-time work every year from 1971to 2017 as a ship’s doctor, medical consultant and lecturer on > 30 different ships for 12 cruise companies. Chair, Section for Cruise ...
... based on the STCW, the MLC 2006 and the STCW-F conventions do not take the consequences of these aspects. Cruise ships The cruise industry has yet another approach to medical selection of employees. ...
... to ship, crew and environment, financial losses Cruise ship Risk for passengers, delays, reputation of company, insurance Table 5: Factors of importance to consequence assessment. ...
... Work encompasses bulk cargo carriers, oil and gas transportation on tankers, both small and massive container ships, passenger ferries and cruise ships. They work with fish catching on small boats in sheltered ...
... In addition, diving takes place on merchant or cruise ships allows inspection for damage beneath the water line, in a water hull survey, cleaning of the hull and security inspections. Offshore divers are ...
... cruise passengers. As with cargo transport the requirements for crew competence and fitness are variable. Passengers themselves may have to make a declaration about health before travelling but are expected ...
... As a result, the traditional intercontinental passenger liners thus have largely disappeared. Current passenger shipping segments include: cruise vessels regional and coastal ferries high speed ...
... limitations on formal prevalence or incidence studies because of a lack of information on the overall at-risk seafarer populations. An exception to this is in the cruise industry, where valid single ship ...
... Congo-Oubangui-Sangha CIE Comission International d'Éclairage (International Commission on Illumination) CIRM Centro Internazionale Radio Medico (Rome) CLIA Cruise Lines International ...
... for crimes committed against US citizens. This is discussed further in Ch 9.6. The type of ship, such as a cruise ship or a war ship, also is considered. For example, on a cruise ship flagged in an ...
... states, but some important coastal states are not parties. [21] This treaty was instigated as a reaction to the 1985 hijacking of the Italian cruise-ship Achille Lauro by politically motivated terrorists. ...
... cargo ships, 300,000 on passenger and cruise ships and approximately 200,000 crew work on other types of vessels, including commercial fishing, n especially dangerous branch, according to IHS Markit’s ...
... pandemic particularly affected cruise ships. While there are tested operational concepts for such situations on shore, this is often not the case for the sea and port sector. The research project KOMPASS, ...
... Cruise ships CDC Yellow Book (online resource yearly updates) wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/yellowbook An up to date resource for clinicians giving pretravel advice. The European Manual for Hygiene ...
... vary. Several longitudinal studies of the epidemiology of illnesses among passengers from medical log books on cruise ships described large outbreaks of Influenza A and B and currently COVID-19. Acute ...