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28 to remain on Scientology ship in Curacao in measles scare

The Freewinds cruise ship owned by the Church of Scientology is seen docked in quarantine at the Point Seraphine terminal in Castries, Saint Lucia, on May 2, 2019, after a measles case was detected onboard. - A cruise ship owned by the Church of Scientology has been quarantined in Saint Lucia for two days because of a measles case, health authorities on the Caribbean island said May 2, 2019. The vessel was Thursday docked at the Point Seraphine terminal in the port of the capital Castries, according to an AFP photographer. One man was spotted on board. (Photo by Kirk Elliott / AFP)        (Photo credit should read KIRK ELLIOTT/AFP/Getty Images)
KIRK ELLIOTT/AFP/Getty Images
The Freewinds cruise ship owned by the Church of Scientology is seen docked in quarantine at the Point Seraphine terminal in Castries, Saint Lucia, on May 2, 2019, after a measles case was detected onboard. – A cruise ship owned by the Church of Scientology has been quarantined in Saint Lucia for two days because of a measles case, health authorities on the Caribbean island said May 2, 2019. The vessel was Thursday docked at the Point Seraphine terminal in the port of the capital Castries, according to an AFP photographer. One man was spotted on board. (Photo by Kirk Elliott / AFP) (Photo credit should read KIRK ELLIOTT/AFP/Getty Images)
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Authorities in Curacao announced Saturday that 17 crew members and 11 passengers must stay aboard a ship owned by the Church of Scientology that is under quarantine after a confirmed case of measles.

Dr. Izzy Gerstenbluth said the group is required to stay on the 440-feet Freewinds ship until May 13 because they are still at risk of contracting measles after a female crew member contracted the disease.

He said the remaining crew members and passengers, a total of 318 people, are free to leave the ship.

“They are not a threat to anyone anymore, and they cannot become sick anymore,” he said.

Church officials have not returned messages seeking comment. According to the church’s website, the ship is the home of “a religious retreat ministering the most advanced level of spiritual counseling.”

The ship was previously quarantined in St. Lucia and arrived in its home port of Curacao a week ago. Authorities then took 277 blood samples from those who did not have proof of vaccination and sent them to the Netherlands.

Gerstenbluth said the female crew member who was infected had been in Europe and arrived April 17 in Curacao with cold symptoms. Authorities said she got tested for measles, but had already left for St. Lucia by the time the results came back. Officials in Curacao then alerted the government of St. Lucia.

Symptoms include runny nose, fever and a red-spotted rash. Most people recover, but measles can lead to pneumonia, brain swelling and even death in some cases.

More than 700 people in 22 U.S. states have gotten measles this year, with federal officials saying the resurgence is driven by misinformation about vaccines.