
How worried should we be about hantavirus?
How worried should we be about hantavirus?11 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleMichelle RobertsDigital health editorReutersOfficials are taking precuations and wearing protective clothing for the...
No Meeting by June 30 — Where will Trump and Putin meet after that?
Key developments are emerging from the global stage. How worried should we be about hantavirus? 11 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleMichelle RobertsDigital health editorReutersOfficials are taking precuations and wearing protective clothing for the evacuation of passengers from MV HondiusThe outbreak of hantavirus on a cruise ship carrying passengers from across the world is a situation that authorities say they are taking incredibly seriously. Three passengers have died either on board or after travelling on the ship, which set sail from Argentina a month ago.
Three others were evacuated from the ship for treatment. A huge operation is in place to trace people potentially exposed to the virus who have already taken flights home to numerous countries, including the UK, South Africa, the Netherlands, the US and Switzerland. Health experts stress the risk to the general public is low.
The Details
So how worried should we be? Contact-tracing a priorityThe contact-tracing work has been "quite a mammoth effort", Prof Robin May, chief scientific officer at the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) told Breakfast, and one "we will continue to do... In an update on Thursday, operator Oceanwide Expeditions said 30 passengers, including seven Britons, had disembarked when the ship docked at St Helena on 24 April.
The company said it had contacted all of those who had already disembarked. The UKHSA said two Britons who had left the ship at St Helena had contacted health officials when they heard about the cases after flying home from Johannesburg and are now voluntarily self-isolating in the UK. They do not have symptoms.
In the US, health officials in Georgia and Arizona have confirmed to the that they are monitoring three passengers who had returned to the US after disembarking. None currently have symptoms. Human-to-human spread is possible with the specific Andes strain that has been detected, say experts.
What Experts Say
But the World Health Organization (WHO) says the risk of infections globally remains low because this is not a disease like Covid or flu that spreads easily. In its latest update, it says eight cases of hantavirus - three confirmed and five suspected - have been identified in people who were on the ship. It is still not clear how the outbreak started.
Hantavirus typically spreads from rodents, with people infected by breathing in air contaminated with virus particles from rodent urine, droppings, or saliva. The cruise had been visiting remote wildlife areas, so a passenger could have come into contact with the virus then, or before boarding the ship. Health experts believe that some of the infections on board MV Hondius may have passed between people that were in very close contact.
Even luxury cruise ships have relatively cramped or restricted living conditions, with people sharing cabins and dining areas - places where infections could spread.
The development has drawn wide international attention, with diplomatic circles watching closely.





