WHO Warns of More Hantavirus Cases After Cruise Evacuation in Spain

The WHO warns additional hantavirus cases could emerge in coming weeks after the MV Hondius cruise evacuation in Spain. Eleven cases have been reported, including three deaths, with nine confirmed as Andes virus infections. The global public health risk remains low, but all evacuated passengers must undergo 42 days of health monitoring. Spain coordinated the evacuation of over 120 people under strict sanitary measures.

Key Points: WHO: More Hantavirus Cases Possible After Cruise Evacuation

  • WHO warns more hantavirus cases may emerge in coming weeks
  • 11 cases reported including 3 deaths
  • Evacuated passengers monitored for 42 days
  • Spain coordinated evacuation of over 120 people
3 min read

WHO says more hantavirus cases may emerge in coming weeks after cruise evacuation

WHO warns of potential new hantavirus cases after MV Hondius cruise evacuation in Spain, with 11 cases and 3 deaths reported. Global risk remains low.

"Given the long incubation period of the virus, it is possible that we may see more cases in the coming weeks. - Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus"

Madrid, May 12

The World Health Organisation Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus on Tuesday said additional hantavirus cases could still emerge in the coming weeks following the evacuation of passengers from the outbreak-hit cruise ship MV Hondius, while stressing that the global public health risk remains low.

"Given the long incubation period of the virus, it is possible that we may see more cases in the coming weeks," Tedros said at a joint press conference with Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez held at the Moncloa Palace in Madrid.

According to Tedros, 11 hantavirus-related cases have so far been reported, including three deaths. Nine of the 11 cases have been confirmed as Andes virus infections, while the remaining two are considered probable cases.

"Our assessment continues to be that the global public health risk remains low," he said, adding that there is currently "no sign" of a larger outbreak.

Tedros said WHO recommends that all evacuated passengers undergo active health monitoring for 42 days from their last exposure date, either in designated quarantine facilities or at home, with the monitoring period lasting until June 21.

"Anyone who becomes symptomatic should be isolated and treated immediately," he added, Xinhua news agency reported.

Tedros also thanked the Spanish government for agreeing to receive the ship and lead the evacuation effort, praising Spain for fulfilling "its legal duties under international law" while also demonstrating "solidarity, compassion and kindness" throughout the operation.

The Spanish government agreed on May 5 to receive the MV Hondius after a hantavirus outbreak was reported aboard the vessel, following requests from the World Health Organisation (WHO), the European Union and more than 20 governments seeking assistance in evacuating and repatriating those on board.

The vessel arrived off the Spanish island of Tenerife on May 10 and docked at the Port of Granadilla a day later. During the two-day operation, passengers and some crew members disembarked from the vessel and were transferred under strict protective and sanitary measures before being flown out of Spain.

Sanchez described the evacuation operation as a "success," saying Spain had coordinated 10 special flights to evacuate more than 120 people of different nationalities who had disembarked from the vessel between May 10 and May 11. He added that the operation had been conducted under four guiding principles: "scientific rigor," "absolute transparency of information," "institutional coordination," and "international cooperation."

Spanish health authorities said all evacuated people from the MV Hondius had left Tenerife by May 11, while the vessel departed for Rotterdam with 28 crew members remaining on board.

The European Commission said it is coordinating closely with Spain, EU member states, and other countries participating in the EU Civil Protection Mechanism, while also working with the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), WHO and other partners to coordinate passenger disembarkation, return transfers and follow-up health monitoring.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

A
Arjun K
Spain handled this well with scientific rigor and transparency. But I'm concerned about the 28 crew members who stayed aboard and are now heading to Rotterdam. Are they also being monitored? In India we've seen how missing links in contact tracing can lead to new clusters.
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Vikram M
Hantavirus is no joke - I remember reading about the outbreak in Argentina years ago. Death rate can be high. Glad WHO is on top of this, but between COVID and now this, global health security needs serious overhaul. India should push for stronger cruise ship health protocols at WHO meetings.
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Siddharth J
While I appreciate the coordinated response, I can't help but notice how differently the global north responds to health threats on cruise ships vs. when outbreaks happen in developing countries like ours. The same urgency and resources are rarely seen for outbreaks in South Asia or Africa. Just saying.
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Neha E
Three deaths out of 11 cases is scary - that's nearly 30% mortality rate. Andes virus seems particularly dangerous. The 42-day active health monitoring makes sense since incubation can be 2-4 weeks. Hope all countries receiving these passengers have proper isolation facilities ready. Preventive measures beats cure always. ✨
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Rajat Q
Spain showed class by accepting the ship under international law obligations. But honestly, after COVID, we need a global early warning system for all infectious diseases - not just the ones that make headlines. Hantavirus doesn't spread person-to-person easily, but still, better safe than sorry for the crew and evacuees.

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