Cruise Ship Cleared After Norovirus Outbreak Briefly Halts Sailing
French health authorities have cleared Ambassador Cruise Line’s Ambition after briefly confining all guests and crew to the ship following a norovirus outbreak in Bordeaux.

Passengers were allowed to disembark and shore excursions resumed after testing confirmed the situation was under control.
The ship, on a 14-night sailing of Western France and Spain, departed Belfast on May 8 before continuing from Liverpool on May 9. Cases increased after passengers boarded in Liverpool, with symptoms peaking while the ship was docked in Brest.
The Ambition arrived in Bordeaux with 1,233 passengers, mostly from Britain and Ireland, and 514 crew. Testing confirmed the outbreak was a gastro-intestinal infection. Nearly 50 guests and at least one crew member reported symptoms.
Death Unrelated to Outbreak
A 92-year-old British passenger died during the voyage on May 10. Initial reports suggested a possible link to the illness, but health authorities confirmed the man suffered a heart attack and his death was unrelated to the gastrointestinal outbreak.
The cruise line stated the guest had not reported any symptoms related to the illness, and support is being provided to his friends and family.
Revised Itinerary
Asymptomatic passengers were cleared to disembark while those still symptomatic remained in isolation onboard.
Ambassador confirmed the Ambition stayed in Bordeaux overnight on May 14 before departing on a revised itinerary May 15, citing forecast rough weather in the Bay of Biscay as an additional factor.
Enhanced sanitation measures, medical monitoring, and isolation protocols remain in place for the remainder of the voyage.
The news comes after a norovirus outbreak was reported on Caribbean Princess earlier this week with over 100 people sick, that cruise ended in Florida on May 11.





































