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U.S. Navy Capt. Carlos Sardiello, commanding officer of the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71), gives blood for a serology study aimed at identifying antibodies associated with COVID-19 aboard the ship on April 22, 2020.

U.S. Navy Capt. Carlos Sardiello, commanding officer of the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71), gives blood for a serology study aimed at identifying antibodies associated with COVID-19 aboard the ship on April 22, 2020. (Kaylianna Genier/U.S. Navy)

WASHINGTON — Nearly 1,000 sailors assigned to the USS Theodore Roosevelt are still fighting the coronavirus after the Navy reassessed how it determines whether someone has recovered from the virus.

Medical staff were finding that asymptomatic sailors placed in quarantine for 14 days were testing positive for the coronavirus when leaving isolation, according to Cmdr. Clayton Doss, a Navy spokesman.

Positive tests for the virus continued to happen with Roosevelt sailors who initially tested negative, so Navy officials determined the service needed to reevaluate its criteria and testing procedures, Doss said. The initial negative test can happen when the amount of virus in the body is not high enough for the test to detect it at the time, he said.

As of Tuesday, the Navy has had 1,691 cases of the coronavirus among its sailors, the highest number of cases among the military services. Together, the military services have had 4,265 cases of the coronavirus, according to a Defense Department daily report on the virus.

U.S. Navy Cmdr. Brianna Rupp, a preventive medicine physician from the Navy and Marine Corps Public Health Center, takes a survey from a U.S. sailor, assigned to the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt  as part of a public health outbreak investigation on April 22, 2020.

U.S. Navy Cmdr. Brianna Rupp, a preventive medicine physician from the Navy and Marine Corps Public Health Center, takes a survey from a U.S. sailor, assigned to the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt as part of a public health outbreak investigation on April 22, 2020. (Chris Liaghat/U.S. Navy)

The Navy will now only count sailors recovered for the virus once they have had two successive negative tests, with the second test happening 24 hours after the first negative test. Every sailor on the Roosevelt is now being retested this way when they begin the process to leave their quarantine to ensure they are clear of the virus, Doss said.

The initial testing of all 4,800 crew members aboard the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier has been complete as of Monday, according to the Navy. The Navy reported Saturday about 112 Roosevelt sailors had recovered from the virus. On Monday, the Navy said only 14 sailors had recovered. The recovered numbers released by the Navy from now on will be based on this new testing criteria, Doss said.

Christian Akins, left, from Atlanta, and Austin Brunt, from Charleston, S.C., assigned to Naval Hospital Guam, take a nasal sample from a U.S. sailor assigned to the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71) as part of a public health outbreak investigation on April 23, 2020.

Christian Akins, left, from Atlanta, and Austin Brunt, from Charleston, S.C., assigned to Naval Hospital Guam, take a nasal sample from a U.S. sailor assigned to the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71) as part of a public health outbreak investigation on April 23, 2020. (Kaylianna Genier/U.S. Navy)

The reported active cases on the Roosevelt increased from 833 on Saturday to 955 on Monday. Now with 98 cases being reset and 24 new cases of the virus, the overall number of Roosevelt sailors still considered sick increased by 122, according to the Navy’s Monday coronavirus case report.

In a similar case in Japan, an undisclosed number of sailors from the USS Ronald Reagan strike group tested positive for the coronavirus during the weekend after their mandated pre-deployment isolation ended. They were asymptomatic and have been put into isolation. Sailors who tested negative were allowed to board their ships.

The crew members of the USS Kidd will soon experience its own quarantine and testing as cases aboard the destroyer increased to 47 as of Monday.

As of Monday, one Roosevelt sailor is still being treated at U.S. Naval Hospital Guam for symptoms, but the individual is not in intensive care.

(Noga Ami-rav/Stars and Stripes)

As the outbreak among the Roosevelt crew continues, the outcome of the investigation into their former commander and the Navy’s response to their plight has stalled.

Defense Secretary Mark Esper received a verbal briefing Friday from Navy leaders about their investigation into the virus outbreak on the Roosevelt and whether Capt. Brett Crozier should regain command of the ship, according to Jonathan Hoffman, the chief spokesman for the Pentagon. According to news reports Friday, the recommendations included reinstating Crozier.

However, Esper said he will read the written report before meeting again with Navy leaders and making his decision, according to Hoffman.

The Navy’s investigation concerns more than Crozier and it examined communications between naval officers as well as the service’s virus response efforts spanning multiple time zones and commands, a senior defense official said Friday.

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