A Japanese professor who gained access to the Diamond Princess cruise ship said in a YouTube video posted Tuesday that he was shocked by the lack of coronavirus infection control measures on board.
MORE: PHOTOS: Coronavirus outbreak sparks global health emergencyMore than 620 people on the ship have tested positive for novel coronavirus, making the ship, which has been docked off the coast of Japan, the largest center of coronavirus infection outside of China.
"It was completely chaotic," said Dr. Kentaro Iwata, a infectious diseases professor at Kobe University in Japan, who reported witnessing passengers, crew members and medical professionals walking around the ship without wearing protective clothing.
One medical officer told Iwata that she'd given up protecting herself because she believed that she was already infected, he said.
MORE: CDC issues additional travel restrictions for Americans on infected cruise ship"The cruise ship was completely inadequate in terms of the infection control," said Iwata, who has dealt with infectious outbreaks, including Ebola, cholera and SARS, for more than 20 years.
"There was no distinction between the green zone, which is free of infection, and the red zone, which is potentially contaminated by the virus," he said.
Iwata, who claimed he was kicked off the ship after his brief visit, had suggested several measures that authorities on the ship could take to improve infection control, including eliminating the informed consent papers that were being passed back and forth between passengers who were potentially infected with the virus and staff.
"We have to do something about this cruise," Iwata said. "We have to help people inside the ship."
MORE: China revokes press credentials for 3 Wall Street Journal reporters amid coronavirus crisisSince leaving Diamond Princess, Iwata said he has voluntarily quarantined himself in a single room, separate from his family, and won't be going to work for several weeks.
"I'm very scared of getting the infection myself," he added.
ABC News' Joseph Simonetti contributed to this report.