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(15 Mar 2020) LEAD IN: For visitors to Amsterdam hoping to visit one of the Dutch capital's famous "coffee shops", the risks presented by the Coronavirus can be a bit of a downer. One Amsterdam marijuana cafe is taking precautions, installing an airport-style heat scanner to check whether patrons have a fever, a move guests say is reassuring. STORY-LINE: Amsterdam's famous "coffee shops", where you can smoke marijuana, are a big draw for visitors, but with travel restrictions and rising numbers of confirmed cases of the Coronavirus, tourists are facing new stresses. Here at the Prix d'Ami coffee shop, there's a new entry protocol. The marijuana-selling cafe in the Dutch capital has stationed a scanner at the door that checks visitors' temperatures. Anybody with a fever will be turned away. On this morning, trade is brisk. Over the course of a couple of hours, the scanner goes off just once. On that occasion, after a second reading, the female visitor was cleared, and allowed in. Manager Youri Florijn says the number of tourists are declining due to the COVID-19 virus, but that customers keep coming. In fact, he thinks they may even be swapping one way of relaxing, for another. "We were thinking about safety measure to keep this place the Coronavirus free," says Florijn. "We searched on the internet and found this scanner that if often use at the airports. This device needs a few seconds to scan a person's eyes and measure body temperature. It pips when the body temperature is higher than normal. In that case, we will not let a person in and advice visiting a doctor. Further people that pass the test must sanitize hands and then walk in the coffee shop. We know that this measure is not protecting 100%, but it is a bit of help." As well as the temperature scanner, the coffee shop has installed a hand disinfectant dispenser for everybody who enters. "The reactions are very positive. People are glad that we have this measure. You know the feeling when you get in and see a lot of people around and you know they are checked and their hands are clean, you can enjoy your joint in peace. That was actually our intention," Florijn says. The Dutch capital's weed-selling "coffee shops have long been a magnet for tourists. It seems the Coronavirus isn't changing that just yet. Lorraine, a visitor from the UK, says the new system is a bit quirky, but she understands the seriousness of the situation as numbers of confirmed Coronavirus cases rise. "We come here one day, and it wasn't there, and the next day it was there, and it was like "what's this?". And then they said obviously, the Coronavirus. We were like, "oh okay". It's a kind of funny, but obviously it's serious," she says. Another British visitor, Kelly, agrees. "I think it's really good, I think it's really good. We were just saying, because when people are getting off at the train station, they're coming straight in here. So it's a really good thing to do, everyone is getting tested, so it's great, I like it," she says. Hoping to keep pot users away from dealers of harder drugs, the Netherlands in the late 1970s began allowing "coffee shops" to sell marijuana. The shops remain a popular attraction, especially in Amsterdam, but the drug remains illegal elsewhere in the country. As of 13 March 2020 at 1600 GMT there were 804 confirmed cases of Coronavirus in the Netherlands, and the country had recorded 10 deaths, according to John Hopkins University. For most people, the new Coronavirus causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. The vast majority of people recover from the new virus. Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork Twitter: / ap_archive Facebook: / aparchives Instagram: / apnews You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/you...