In connection with the
COVID-19 pandemic, navies from several countries deployed
hospital ships to combat the disease. Aside from providing health services, hospital ships would allow civilian hospitals to offload some of the patients, relieving the pressure on facilities ashore.[1][2] However, this also means that each ship would battle the onboard outbreaks of their own [3]
As the infections have slowed or fallen short of worst-case predictions, the hospital ships became unused or barely used.[4]
dr. Soeharso evacuated 89 crew of the cruise ship Diamond Princess from
Indramayu thermal power plant port, after the crew got health certificate from
Japan and flew to
Kertajati International Airport. They then used buses to travel to port. The crew underwent a second round of test, of which one crew member had a positive result for
COVID-19 and was hospitalized in
Jakarta. 68 crew of Diamond Princess disembarked at Sebaru Kecil Islet. World Dream evacuees and Diamond Princess evacuees were housed at separated different blocks/buildings.[6][7]
KRI Semarang
The Indonesian Navy
KRI Semarang transported 68 crews of the Diamond Princess who underwent observation for the coronavirus disease 2019 in Sebaru Kecil Islet to the
Port of Tanjung Priok,
North Jakarta, on 15 March 2020.[8] She transported
hand sanitizers from Singapore to
Batam on 9 April 2020.[9] On 18 May 2020, she was dispatched to carry
COVID-19 testing kits and hand sanitizers from Yayasan Temasek Singapura, Singapore, to Indonesia.[10]
USNS Mercy was deployed to
Los Angeles to provide hospital relief from the
COVID-19 pandemic.[11] The ship arrived and docked at the
Port of Los Angeles cruise ship terminal on 27 March 2020.[12] Her mission was to treat patients other than those with COVID-19, freeing up land-based hospitals to deal with the virus,[13] similar to how
USNS Comfort deployed
in New York.[14] As of 14 April, 2020, seven crew members have tested positive for the virus and been removed from the ship for quarantine, along with 100 other sailors who had contact with them.[15][16] As of 15 April, Mercy had treated 48 patients, of whom 30 have been discharged.[16] The ship departed Los Angeles on 15 May.[17]
Related nearby train derailment
On 31 March, while the ship was docked, a
Pacific Harbor Line freight train was derailed, with the wreckage coming to a stop just 230 m (250 yd) from the ship. In an apparent "bizarre attempt to expose a perceived
conspiracy", the derailment was intentionally caused by the
train engineer who told police that he was suspicious of the vessel and believed the ship was not "what they say it's for." No one was injured and the ship was not harmed; the engineer was charged with
train wrecking.[18]
USNS Comfort
Comfort began deployment from
Norfolk, Virginia, to
New York Harbor on 28 March 2020 to help deal with the impact of the
COVID-19 pandemic.[19][20]Comfort arrived in New York on 30 March,[21][22] and docked at Pier 90.[23] Although the ship has 1,100 personnel and a capacity of 1,000 beds, as of 3 April it was treating only 22 patients;[24] the low figure was attributable to "bureaucratic obstacles and military procedures."[23]
The ship's stated mission was, originally, to treat patients who did not have
COVID-19, freeing up land-based hospitals to focus on patients with the virus,[21] and originally required a patient to
test negative for the coronavirus before boarding, but on 3 April changed its process to no longer requires a negative test and to accept "asymptomatic, screened patients who will be isolated and tested immediately upon arrival."[23] On 3 April, multiple patients with the virus spent the night aboard the ship after they were accidentally transferred to the ship from the
Jacob K. Javits Center, where a
field hospital was in operation; the patients were transferred back to the Javits Center after testing positive for the virus."[23]
On 17 April it was announced that "the USNS COMFORT is prepared to admit patients within a one-hour traveling radius from the ship," and preparations were made to receive coronavirus patients from the Philadelphia area. The ship has removed half its 1000 beds so that it could isolate and treat coronavirus patients.[25] On 21 April, Governor Cuomo told President Trump that the ship was no longer needed in New York. While docked in the city, it treated 179 patients.[26]
Splendid
Mediterranean Shipping Company's
Grandi Navi Veloci converted one of their ferries,
Splendid [
it], into a hospital ship in order to treat coronavirus patients.[27] The ship was delivered to
Liguria, Italy, on 23 March 2020, and was made available for the symbolic cost of 1 EUR.[28][29] With help from
Registro Italiano Navale and a number of local and national companies, many of which donated their time, materials, and expertise, Splendid was converted into a hospital ship in roughly 10 days.[29][30][31] Docked at
Genoa's Ponte Colombo, the hospital ship is currently treating only coronavirus patients without serious pathologies, such as patients recovering after having been previously intubated.[32][33][34]
BRP Ang Pangulo
On 3 April 2020, President
Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines ordered the conversion of
BRP Ang Pangulo of the
Philippine Navy (PN) to accommodate COVID-19 patients. The
presidential yacht was used as a 28-bed capacity isolation facility for military frontline workers during the COVID-19 pandemic.[35][36]
On 30 April 2021, the PN has announced that the Ang Pangulo was prepared to admit coronavirus patients. The ship was docked at Pier 13,
Manila South Harbor.[37]
As of 22 January 2022, the PN announced that the ship was able to extend medical aid to a total of 2,450 patients in
Siargao and the
Dinagat Islands as part of its humanitarian missions in the area.[38]