WHO Confirms Five Hantavirus Cases on Atlantic Cruise Ship; Risk Low

The World Health Organization confirmed five hantavirus cases on the Atlantic cruise ship Hondius, with three fatalities and three suspected cases. The outbreak involves the Andes strain, which can spread between humans through close contact. WHO assesses the public health risk as low but warns more cases may emerge due to the virus's six-week incubation period. The first victims likely contracted the virus during a bird-watching expedition in South America before boarding.

Key Points: Hantavirus Outbreak on Cruise Ship: WHO Confirms 5 Cases

  • Five confirmed hantavirus cases on Dutch-flagged ship Hondius
  • Three deaths linked to Andes strain
  • Virus can spread between humans through close contact
  • Incubation period up to six weeks, more cases possible
  • WHO notified 12 countries after passengers disembarked
2 min read

WHO confirms five hantavirus cases on Atlantic cruise ship; warns risk to public remains "low"

WHO confirms five hantavirus cases on Atlantic cruise ship with three deaths. Risk to public remains low, but more cases possible due to incubation period.

"While this is a serious incident, WHO assesses the public health risk as low. - Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus"

Geneva, May 8

The World Health Organization has confirmed five instances of hantavirus linked to fatalities on a cruise vessel currently navigating the Atlantic Ocean.

In addition to the confirmed cases, three further individuals are suspected of carrying the Andes strain of the virus. Despite the severity of the situation, the global health body maintains that while more infections could emerge, the broader risk to public health remains minimal.

Addressing a press briefing on Thursday, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus revealed that the United Kingdom had alerted the agency to a cluster of passengers suffering from acute respiratory distress aboard the Dutch-flagged ship, the Hondius. The vessel is currently en route from Cape Verde to Tenerife, Spain.

"While this is a serious incident, WHO assesses the public health risk as low," Ghebreyesus informed journalists. He detailed the current toll, noting that eight cases have surfaced to date, "including three dead, five confirmed, and three suspected."

Hantaviruses are typically transmitted to humans through direct contact with infected rodents or their waste. However, the Andes strain identified in this outbreak is unique for its ability to spread between humans, a phenomenon previously restricted to close or prolonged contact between family members or medical staff.

The timeline of the outbreak traces back to a male passenger who first showed symptoms on April 6 and passed away five days later. The WHO chief explained that the initial death went unattributed to hantavirus as no samples were collected and the symptoms mirrored other viral infections. The man's wife became the second fatality after falling ill and dying on April 25 in Saint Helena. A third woman succumbed to the virus on May 2, a week after her symptoms first appeared.

Ghebreyesus warned that the window for new cases remains open, stating, "Given the incubation period of the hantavirus, which can be up to six weeks, it is possible that more cases may be reported."

Investigations indicate that the first two victims had participated in a bird-watching expedition across Chile, Argentina, and Uruguay prior to boarding. These locations are known habitats for the specific rodents that carry the virus. In response, Argentine authorities are tracing the couple's itinerary, and Tedros confirmed that Argentina is distributing 2,500 diagnostic kits to laboratories across five different nations.

The WHO has issued notifications to 12 countries whose citizens disembarked at Saint Helena, including the UK, the United States, Canada, Germany, and Singapore, among others.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
I appreciate the WHO's measured response, but isn't it a bit late? Three deaths already, and they only confirmed it now? 🤔 The incubation period of six weeks means we need strict quarantine measures for all cruise passengers entering Indian waters. Our healthcare system can't handle another outbreak after COVID.
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Vikram M
Amazing how a bird-watching trip turned into a nightmare for that poor couple. 🐦🚫 And Andes strain spreading between humans? That's a whole new level of concern. India should stockpile diagnostic kits immediately, not wait for cases to appear. Proactive measures always beat reactive panic!
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James A
As someone who works in international logistics, this is a major wake-up call for global health surveillance. The fact that 12 countries' citizens disembarked at Saint Helena shows how interconnected we are. WHO's risk assessment might be "low," but for families of those affected, it's anything but. Thoughts and prayers from Canada 🙏
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Nisha Z
While I understand the need for calm, I can't help but feel frustrated. The WHO says risk is low, but three people are dead! 😤 India has learned hard lessons from COVID - we should immediately screen all cruise passengers arriving at Mumbai, Chennai, and Cochin ports. Bhai, prevention is better than cure! 💪
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Ravi K
This is a serious issue, but let's not panic unnecessarily. Hantavirus isn't airborne like COVID; it requires close contact. The real problem is the Andes strain's human-to-human transmission - that's new. India should issue travel advisories for South America and cruise travel until more is known. Common sense, yaar.

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