An American schoolteacher came forward and isolated himself in the bathroom for five hours, only to find out in the middle that he had contracted a corona infection.
Marisa Fodeo suffered a sore throat on a flight from Chicago, USA to Reykjavக்k, Iceland on December 20.
The corona test was performed using a corona quick test kit that he had brought with him on board the aircraft. It was revealed that he was suffering from corona.
He then isolated himself in the bathroom and spent the entire trip in the bathroom. Only one flight attendant provided him with food, water, and drinks.
“It was a different experience,” Marisa Fodeo, a Michigan-based teacher, told NBC News. “I had 150 passengers on the plane with me and I was too scared that I would spread the corona virus to them,” he said.
The video, which was uploaded to the DickTalk processor, has been viewed more than 40 million times in the bathroom of an aircraft owned by Iceland Air. Marisa Fodeo praised the flight attendant who helped her in that difficult situation.
“He made sure I had everything I needed for those five hours. He gave me everything from food to drinks. He was constantly making sure I was well,” Maria told NBC News.
After landing in Iceland, Marisa Fotio said she had to be isolated at a Red Cross hotel.
It is noteworthy that Marisa Fodeo faced such a challenging situation when the Omigron strain was spreading all over the world, especially due to the increasing number of infections in the United States.
Although the problems caused by Omigron Trip are minimal, it is highly contagious, according to several studies.
According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an average of 2.77 million people a day in the United States are newly infected with corona in seven days. The number of corona-infected and hospitalized deaths remains high.
Various industries are facing pressure as the number of isolators increases to keep the corona from spreading. Take air travel, for example.
Several flights have been canceled over the past few days. For the sixth day in a row, about 1,100 flights were canceled across the United States on Thursday, according to data from Flight Aware.