In the February issue, we gave
Roatan's CoCo View Resort a
thumbs down due to repeated turista
outbreaks among the guests --
and even the staff. In January,
Terry Evans, who runs CoCo View's
booking agency, Roatan Charter,
told Undercurrent, "The intestinal
problem occurring on the island
disappeared before it could be
identified or its source traced. We
have not had any problems recently
and have not heard of any new
occurrences from the other
hotels."
Since then, we've received
more reports from folks who've
suffered intestinal problems while
at the resort -- some as recently as
April -- Internet bulletin boards
have many reports. Ron Queen
(Fortuna, CA), estimates that 75
percent of the guests were affected
while he and his wife were at CoCo
View last December. Another
reader reported that "31 of 36
divers were sick within two days.
Intestinal sickness. Speaking with
the bartender, I was informed this
was an ongoing problem. My dive
buddy was in bed for 18 hours
only to venture to the bathroom."
We called Evans again and
told him that things looked even
worse than originally reported. His
response: "You've got a serious
exaggeration." Evans maintained
that on a recent visit, he had heard
no reports of sickness other than
"traveler's stomach." Incidents of
this malady date back to 1982,
when the resort was opened, he
says. Evans claimed that "some
kind of virus" was being passed
around from October to January,
which also affected other tour
groups to Honduras. The last long
duration of it happened in the '80s
and early '90s.
However, the virus defense is
specious. Ernie Campbell, M.D., (www.scuba-doc.com) told us that
"The bacteria is most often enterotoxigenic
Escherichia coli of fecal origin,
but other coliform bacteria
can cause the syndrome of 'traveler's
diarrhea.' All water has a certain
level of bacteria, even in this
country. Some people from other
countries visit here, and they get
'turista' because of the lack of resistance
to the local strain of the bacteria.
If the other resorts on Roatan
don't have the same level of 'turista,'
then one must deduce that
something must be wrong with the
sewage/water supply at CoCo
View." And Undercurrent rarely
receives reports of problems at
other Roatan or Bay Island resorts.
Co-owner Evelyn Evans has
reportedly scheduled Honduran
Health Department inspections
twice since October, but no problems
have been pinpointed. She
has invited guests with restaurant
experience to investigate the
kitchen, again with no results.
Terry Evans (who is not an owner)
says that the entire kitchen staff
rotates every two weeks, and anyone
who's ill is sent home.
However, the problem may
not be isolated to the kitchen.
Some visitors have reported strong
sewage odors in their cabins and
by the resort's lagoon following
heavy rains. This winter was the
wettest rainy season since 1982
(i.e., the resort's history). Evans
claims, "They (the owners) have
done everything I can think of and
as far as I can tell, it's gone."
However, he added, "It will come
back; it comes to every resort."
In defense of resort management,
Evans said, "When there's a
problem, they address it. CoCo
View doesn't make money by making
guests sick. I have no complaints
on my desk other than in
exit surveys. The staff discuss these
surveys and respond to guests with
complaints." However, Ron Queen says he never got a response when
he mentioned the problem on his
evaluation form.
The first step to solving a problem
is admitting you have one.
Based on what Evans told
Undercurrent, we have to say that
any future visit to CoCo View
should be considered a crap shoot!
The study, published in the
Journal of the British Medical Association, tracked 50,000 people
who reported gastrointestinal
infections and compared them
with 500,000 people who did not.
Dr. Kare Molbak, of the Danish
Epidemiology Science Center in
Copenhagen, said that infected
people had more than double the
risk of death over the course of a
year. He said other studies had
shown that these infections could
cause a variety of complications,
including dehydration, unnecessary
surgery when abdominal pain
was misdiagnosed, and the spread
of the infection through the
bloodstream. "Nearly all of these
complications are treatable if
patients seek early medical attention,''
Dr. Molbak said. "Patients
who think that they have got a
severe food-born infection should
seek medical treatment.''
If any restaurant or hotel in
the United States had a fraction of
the gastrointestinal problems
reported by the people who visit
CoCo View, it would be shut down
immediately.