Hong Kong seeks more details from WHO on hantavirus outbreak on cruise ship

Hong Kong health authorities are seeking more information from the World Health Organization on a hantavirus outbreak aboard a cruise ship in the Atlantic, while stepping up prevention efforts to protect the city.

Hong Kong’s Centre for Health Protection said on Thursday that it had contacted the World Health Organization about the hantavirus cluster on the MV Hondius. The vessel departed from Argentina on April 1.

The WHO reported three deaths and confirmed five of eight suspected cases. The first patient developed symptoms on April 6.

Laboratory tests showed that viruses in two confirmed cases belonged to the Andes genotype, the only hantavirus type known for limited human-to-human transmission. Hong Kong has recorded zero to two hantavirus cases per year on average over the past five years.

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Photorealistic illustration of the MV Hondius cruise ship nearing Tenerife with emergency teams preparing evacuations amid a hantavirus outbreak.
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Hantavirus outbreak on MV Hondius leaves three dead amid ongoing evacuations

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A hantavirus outbreak has been confirmed on the MV Hondius cruise ship, resulting in three deaths. The vessel, which departed Ushuaia on April 1, is heading to Tenerife where passengers will begin evacuation on Monday.

The World Health Organization has confirmed five cases and three deaths from hantavirus aboard the cruise ship MV Hondius, while stressing that the virus’s limited transmission route makes a wider outbreak unlikely.

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The World Health Organization stated that the hantavirus outbreak on the MV Hondius cruise ship poses no elevated global risk. Director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on Wednesday there are no similarities to the start of the Covid-19 pandemic. Three people have died and eight suspected cases are under investigation on board.

A Swiss man who left the MV Hondius cruise ship at Saint Helena has been confirmed infected with Andes hantavirus and is now isolated in a Zurich hospital. The ship, which has seen three deaths from the outbreak, is heading to Tenerife for passenger evacuation.

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The MV Hondius cruise ship, carrying 149 people including 14 Spaniards, remains anchored off Praia's coast in Cape Verde. Local authorities have denied docking due to fears of a hantavirus outbreak that has caused three deaths. Operator Oceanwide Expeditions is considering ports in Las Palmas or Tenerife as alternatives.

Health authorities in Paraná confirmed two hantavirus cases this year on Friday, both unrelated to the outbreak under investigation on a cruise ship monitored by the WHO.

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Spain's government, in coordination with the WHO, has approved the MV Hondius cruise ship—stranded off Cape Verde amid a hantavirus outbreak that killed three—to dock in the Canary Islands within three or four days. Three passengers, including a gravely ill doctor, will be airlifted first for treatment.

 

 

 

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