WHO Confirms 5 Hantavirus Cases on Cruise Ship, Alerts 12 Nations

The World Health Organization has confirmed five hantavirus cases linked to a cruise ship outbreak, with three additional suspected cases. The WHO has informed 12 countries whose nationals were on the MV Hondius, which disembarked passengers at Saint Helena. WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus stated the outbreak is expected to remain limited if proper measures are taken. Meanwhile, two suspected patients remain in a grounded air ambulance in Spain's Canary Islands due to a technical malfunction.

Key Points: WHO confirms 5 hantavirus cases on cruise ship, 12 countries alerted

  • WHO confirms 5 hantavirus cases on cruise ship MV Hondius
  • 12 countries informed of affected nationals
  • 2,500 diagnostic kits being shipped to five countries
  • 149 people on board from 23 nationalities
2 min read

WHO confirms 5 hantavirus cases, 12 countries informed

WHO confirms five hantavirus cases linked to MV Hondius cruise ship outbreak. 12 countries informed. 2,500 diagnostic kits shipped. Outbreak expected to remain limited.

"the agency currently expects the outbreak to remain limited if appropriate public health measures are implemented quickly and effectively - Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus"

New Delhi, May 7

Amid the global alarm, the World Health Organization on Thursday confirmed five hantavirus cases linked to cruise ship outbreak, while three additional cases remain suspected.

WHO has now informed 12 countries whose nationals disembarked the cruise ship MV Hondius earlier during the voyage at the remote British territory of Saint Helena in the South Atlantic Ocean.

Those 12 countries are Canada, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Singapore, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States of America.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a media briefing in Geneva that the agency currently expects the outbreak to remain "limited" if appropriate public health measures are implemented quickly and effectively.

He, however, warned that additional cases remain possible as authorities continue tracing exposed passengers and contacts across multiple countries.

WHO said around 2,500 hantavirus diagnostic kits are being shipped from laboratories in Argentina to five countries.

There are 149 people on the MV Hondius, the ship's Dutch operator Oceanwide Expeditions told the media. There are 23 nationalities on board.

Meanwhile, two suspected hantavirus patients evacuated from the cruise ship MV Hondius remained aboard a grounded air ambulance in Spain's Canary Islands while awaiting a replacement aircraft following a technical malfunction, Spain's Health Ministry said.

The aircraft had departed from Cape Verde and was originally expected to refuel in the western Moroccan city of Marrakesh en route to Amsterdam. However, according to Spanish media reports, Moroccan authorities did not authorise the landing.

"During the refuelling stop, the plane's doctor reported a failure in the patient's electrical support system," Spain's Health Ministry said in a statement.

Earlier, Spain announced that it will receive the hantavirus-linked vessel MV Hondius in the Canary Islands in accordance with international law and the spirit of humanitarianism, the Spanish Health Ministry said in a statement on social media.

The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) is conducting a comprehensive assessment of the situation on board to determine which individuals require urgent evacuation in Cape Verde. The remaining passengers and crew will continue to the Canary Islands, with arrival expected within three to four days.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Ravi K
Hantavirus is zoonotic, spread through rodents, not human-to-human like COVID. But still, 2,500 diagnostic kits being sent from Argentina to five countries? That's a lot. Hope India's ICMR has enough testing capacity for this too. Better safe than sorry! 🐭🦠
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Michael C
As someone from the US, I'm concerned about our nationals on that ship. But the plane's electrical failure and Morocco denying landing? That's chaos. WHO needs to coordinate better. Cruise ships are disasters waiting to happen - after COVID, you'd think they'd have learned.
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Naveen S
Sir, the problem is these kind of news always come and go without much public awareness in India. We had Nipah, we had Zika, now this. Can our health ministry please issue a clear advisory for travellers and also tell us if our rodent control measures are adequate in rural areas? Just saying it's 'limited' isn't enough for public confidence. 😐
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Sarah B
I'm a nurse in Canada. This is serious - hantavirus can cause HPS with 38% mortality. The fact that it's on a cruise ship, with nationals scattered globally, is a nightmare for contact tracing. Kudos to WHO for informing 12 countries, but we need more transparent data on those 5 confirmed cases.
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Arjun K
Interesting how Spain is showing humanitarian spirit while Morocco denied landing. Politics shouldn't come in between when human lives are at stake. Hope the evacuated patients are stable now. But honestly, after COVID, I've become wary of any 'limited outbreak' claims - let's see the data in a month.

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