Airlines take precautions with sick passengers amid coronavirus outbreak

LINTHICUM, Md. — A flight from Las Vegas to Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall airport was halted Saturday because someone who recently traveled to China reported feeling sick.

The incident comes as new precautions are being taken to stop a deadly new coronavirus.

If making your flight on time is worrisome, there are now new concerns at BWI-Marshall about what else passengers could catch.

"We probably need to be a little bit more observant and vigilant," said Wayne Woodbury, a traveler. "Every few days, I may be in the airport. It's a bit of a concern for me, for sure."

"It can come from anywhere. The main thing, washing your hands, making sure you have your hand sanitizer," said Marza Curry, a traveler.

With the deadly coronavirus outbreak originating from Wuhan, China, measures are being taken nationwide and abroad. Saturday's flight from Las Vegas to Baltimore was stopped at BWI-Marshall when someone on board was apparently sick.

Southwest Airlines told 11 News it followed recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention when it responded to the flight.

According to the CDC, the recommendations for airlines include, but are not limited to, identifying sick and potentially infectious travelers by seeing if they have a fever over 100 degrees or show symptoms of skin rashes, difficulty breathing and a persistent cough.

The CDC also suggests crews treat all bodily fluids, like vomit or blood, as if they are infectious.

The Maryland Department of Health released a statement, saying: "A passenger arrived on a flight from Las Vegas to BWI who showed flu-like symptoms and had recently traveled from Beijing, China.

"The person did not meet the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention criteria for 2019 novel coronavirus testing but was referred to a medical facility for evaluation to determine whether additional follow-up was necessary. Per guidance from the CDC, no special action was indicated for this person or for any other passengers or crew on the flight.

"Following evaluation by medical personnel, the person was released.

"The passenger was previously screened and cleared in Mexico and Las Vegas."

"We've seen signatures of this virus in other animal species, but not in humans, and so it has jumped to humans, and it's causing disease, and those are the reasons we're concerned about it," said Andrew Pekosz, a Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health professor of molecular microbiology and immunology who researches viruses and how they work. Read more at WBAL TV