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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MV Hondius cruise ship at Tenerife with health officials evacuating passengers amid hantavirus concerns
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Hantavirus cases reported on MV Hondius cruise ship

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The World Health Organization reported on Monday nine cases of Andes virus hantavirus linked to the MV Hondius cruise ship, with seven confirmed. The vessel arrived in Spain's Tenerife last weekend, where over 90 passengers were evacuated under health supervision.

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 day-long operation to repatriate passengers and crew from the MV Hondius cruise ship struck by hantavirus neared completion late Sunday with 94 people flown home from Spain’s Canary Islands. Three passengers have died from the outbreak that began after the vessel departed Argentina in April. Health officials stressed the risk to the public remains low.

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The MV Hondius cruise ship, where three passengers have died from hantavirus, is approaching Spain's Canary Islands for evacuation of most of its nearly 150 passengers.

Two French passengers on the MV Hondius described their near-normal daily life aboard the ship under international health alert, following three deaths reported since April 11.

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None of the 38 Filipino crew members on the MV Hondius are ill amid a suspected hantavirus outbreak that has killed three passengers, the Philippines' Department of Health confirmed on May 5, 2026. The ship remains in quarantine off Cape Verde with 149 people aboard as investigations continue.

 

 

 

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