
The cruise ship MV Hondius is anchored off the coast of Cape Verde.
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Three individuals showing symptoms of hantavirus were evacuated from the cruise ship MV Hondius after an outbreak that
tragically claimed the lives of three passengers. The evacuees are set to receive medical care in the Netherlands.
The ship embarked from Ushuaia, Argentina, on April 1st, journeying across the South Atlantic with stops in Antarctica,
South Georgia, Nightingale Island, Tristan da Cunha, St. Helena, and Ascension Island.
Two fatalities occurred onboard, and a third individual died in South Africa two days post-disembarkation in St. Helena.
Additionally, a British passenger remains in intensive care in Johannesburg, South Africa.
A Swiss man who disembarked at the end of April also tested positive for hantavirus after exhibiting symptoms. The Britain’s
Health and Safety Executive noted that two asymptomatic British passengers from the ship are currently self-isolating at home.
Understanding Hantavirus
Hantaviruses belong to a category of viruses carried by rodents that can lead to severe illness in humans. Infection typically
occurs through contact with infected rodents or their excreta.
Different hantaviruses are linked to varying clinical syndromes across different global regions. In the Americas,
hantaviruses can trigger a critical respiratory condition known as hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome (HCPS),
carrying a mortality rate of up to 50% among diagnosed cases. In Europe and Asia, they cause hemorrhagic fever with
renal syndrome (HFRS), largely impacting the kidneys and blood vessels.
Globally, estimates suggest around 10,000 to over 100,000 hantavirus infections annually, predominantly in Asia and Europe.
According to South Africa’s National Institute of Infectious Diseases, two individuals who disembarked from the ship tested
positive for Andes virus, a type of hantavirus associated with HCPS. It’s believed this virus can be transmitted between
humans through prolonged close contact.
Symptoms of Hantavirus
Initial symptoms often include fever, muscle pain, headache, and gastrointestinal issues, with some patients advancing
to develop respiratory complications. Diagnosis typically relies on specialized blood tests.
Transmission Routes of Hantavirus
The primary mode of infection is through contact with infected rodents, especially inhaling the virus from contaminated
rodent urine, feces, or saliva.
Due to this, investigations into suspected cases often concentrate on identifying potential exposure to rodent-contaminated
environments such as grocery stores, ship cabins, or storage areas. Hantaviruses are not generally considered easily
transmissible between humans, as explained by Roger Hewson
from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
Infection may also arise from a rodent bite. Activities such as cleaning poorly ventilated spaces, farming, forestry
work, or sleeping in rodent-infected areas elevate the risk of exposure.
As noted by the WHO, human-to-human transmission has only been recorded in cases of Andes virus in the Americas and is
deemed rare. When transmission occurs, it typically involves prolonged close contact, particularly among family members
or intimate partners, especially in the early disease stages when the virus is more transmissible.
Current Spread of Infection: A Cause for Concern?
According to Adam Taylor,
a researcher at Lancaster University in the UK, there is no need for public alarm. “Transmission of hantaviruses usually
requires contact with animal products, rather than human-to-human spread,” he stated. “Precautions are being implemented
onboard to minimize risk, but these are just safety measures.”
Hewson emphasized that one should not hastily conclude the cruise ship setting is the source of infection. “The connection
of confirmed cases to a single ship does not inherently suggest that exposure occurred aboard. It could also have taken
place prior to embarkation, during shore excursions, or from other common environmental sources,” he remarked. “This is
why public health surveillance, laboratory confirmations, and ideally, viral sequencing are crucial.”
Article Updated on May 6, 2026
Correction made regarding the details about a Swiss man who tested positive for hantavirus.
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Source: www.newscientist.com
