Hantavirus Hits US Passenger From Dutch Cruise Ship; Airlift Underway

An American passenger from a hantavirus-affected Dutch cruise ship has tested positive for the virus, with another showing mild symptoms. The two are being airlifted to the US in biocontainment units, initially to the University of Nebraska Medical Center. The outbreak on the MV Hondius has led to eight suspected cases and three deaths. In the UK, 20 evacuated nationals are isolated at a hospital, while a military team deployed to Tristan da Cunha after a case was detected there.

Key Points: US Passenger Tests Positive for Hantavirus From Cruise Ship

  • US passenger from MV Hondius tests positive for hantavirus
  • Two Americans travel in biocontainment units to Nebraska
  • Eight suspected cases, three deaths linked to outbreak
  • UK evacuates 20 nationals to hospital for isolation and monitoring
3 min read

One American tested positive for Hantavirus

An American from a hantavirus-hit cruise ship tests positive. Two passengers in biocontainment units en route to Nebraska for care.

"Upon arrival at each facility, each individual will undergo clinical assessment and receive appropriate care and support based on their condition. - US Department of Health and Human Services"

Washington, May 11

An American passenger from a hantavirus-hit Dutch cruise ship has tested positive for the virus, and another has mild symptoms, the US Department of Health and Human Services have announced.

All 17 American citizens from the MV Hondius cruise ship are currently en route via an airlift to the United States, with the two travelling in the plane's biocontainment units out of an abundance of caution, the department wrote in a post on the social platform X.

The airlift will first take passengers to the Regional Emerging Special Pathogen Treatment Center (RESPTC) at the University of Nebraska Medical Center/Nebraska Medicine in Omaha, Nebraska, before transferring the passenger with mild symptoms to a second RESPTC at their final destination, it said.

"Upon arrival at each facility, each individual will undergo clinical assessment and receive appropriate care and support based on their condition," the department said in the post.

As of Saturday, there were eight suspected cases associated with the outbreak and three deaths, it said.

The incubation period for hantavirus, from first exposure to symptoms, is estimated at one to eight weeks, according to the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, reports Xinhua news agency.

The disease is usually spread by rodents but can, in rare cases, move from person to person, and kills more than a third of people infected.

Meanwhile, in the United Kingdom, 20 nationals evacuated from the hantavirus-affected cruise ship MV Hondius were isolated in a northwest England hospital upon their return on Sunday, as authorities stepped up outbreak containment and monitoring.

The passengers landed in Manchester earlier in the day before being transferred by bus to Arrowe Park Hospital on the Wirral, Merseyside, where they will remain under medical observation for 72 hours.

In a joint statement, local National Health Service (NHS) authorities said the group would stay in a "managed setting for clinical assessment and testing." If they remain symptom-free, they will later be allowed to return home and continue self-isolation for a further 42 days.

The British government said all passengers and crew members returning from the MV Hondius would undergo a total of 45 days of isolation and monitoring. Follow-up work is also underway for individuals who may have been in contact with confirmed or suspected cases.

The emergency measures follow a hantavirus outbreak linked to the MV Hondius, which has resulted in at least eight confirmed or suspected cases and three reported deaths.

As part of the broader response to the outbreak, the British government also deployed a specialist military and medical team to Tristan da Cunha, a remote British Overseas Territory in the South Atlantic, after a British national on the island tested positive for hantavirus.

According to the British Ministry of Defence, six paratroopers and two military clinicians from 16 Air Assault Brigade parachuted onto the island, while oxygen supplies and medical equipment were air-dropped simultaneously.

Tristan da Cunha, a volcanic island group with a population of 221 people, is regarded as Britain's most remote inhabited overseas territory. The islands have no airstrip and are normally accessible only by sea.

The Defence Ministry described the mission as the first time the British military had deployed medical personnel via parachute to provide humanitarian assistance.

The British government said the risk to the general public remained "very low."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The UK military parachuting onto Tristan da Cunha is something else! Shows how seriously they're taking this. But 45 days isolation for everyone who was on that ship seems extreme. Hope this doesn't spread further.
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Priya S
Hantavirus is scary - 1 in 3 infected die? 😰 We've had our own Nipah virus scares in Kerala and learned the hard way about containment. Good that countries are acting fast. But I wonder if India's ICMR is tracking this enough given our rodent populations in many areas.
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Michael C
Respectful criticism: why are they airlifting 17 Americans back to the US with a potentially deadly virus? Shouldn't they be isolating in place? But I also understand the desire for homeland healthcare. Let's hope the biocontainment units work perfectly.
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Vikram M
Hantavirus outbreak in a cruise ship - reminds me of the Diamond Princess during COVID. These ships are breeding grounds for diseases. While I'm glad about quick response, I feel for the families of the 3 who died. Also, India should prepare our ports for such scenarios - we get many cruise tourists.
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James A
As someone from the US, I appreciate our health departments stepping up. But this highlights how global travel can spread diseases anywhere. The incubation period of 8 weeks is terrifying - you could be fine for two months then become seriously ill. Hope everyone recovers.

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