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Home»Lifestyle»Hantavirus cruise LIVE: Cruise passengers being monitored in several US states as CDC prepares official guidance
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Hantavirus cruise LIVE: Cruise passengers being monitored in several US states as CDC prepares official guidance

EditorBy EditorMay 8, 2026No Comments14 Mins Read
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2026-05-07T22:50:01.359Z

Other cruise passengers in the U.S.

An aerial view of a white and black cruise ship taken from the front left, with the name of the ship seen below as it sits in the ocean with a coastline behind it.

An aerial view of the cruise ship MV Hondius stationary off the port of Praia, the capital of Cape Verde, on May 5, 2026.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

In addition to the person in Arizona who recently returned from a cruise on the MV Hondius, several people in Georgia and California are facing the same situation.

On May 7, the Georgia Department of Public Health told Live Science via email that it is “monitoring two Georgia residents who returned home after disembarking from the MV Hondius, the cruise ship at the center of a hantavirus outbreak. The individuals are currently in good health and show no signs of infection. They are following current recommendations from CDC.”

Also on May 7, the California Department of Public Health told Live Science via email that the department is coordinating with local health officials to monitor returning travelers, as needed.

“There is no information that the California residents are ill or infected. In order to protect patient privacy, CDPH cannot disclose the travelers’ residences or other information. At this time, the risk to public health in California is low,” the statement concluded.

Seventeen Americans remain on the MV Hondius, The New York Times reported.

2026-05-07T22:41:42.833Z

Arizona Department of Health Services gives a hantavirus update

About half a dozen Americans are among the passengers who have disembarked the MV Hondius amidst the outbreak. One of those individuals is now in Arizona.

The Arizona Department of Health Services provided an update on May 7, 3 p.m. local time. During a virtual news conference, they said that they received notice on May 5 that an Arizona resident had been on the cruise ship. That individual’s county-level health department is now monitoring their symptoms, checking in daily about their body temperature and any other signs of illness.

The person is currently asymptomatic, and based on the information available, it doesn’t seem likely that they had much if any close contact with the infected individuals on the ship, officials said. The local health department will determine if the person requires testing, and likely, that wouldn’t happen unless they develop symptoms, said Kenneth Komatsu, a state epidemiologist with Arizona Department of Health Services. That’s in part because an asymptomatic person could very well come back negative on a test, he noted.

If the individual were to eventually develop symptoms, testing, contact tracing and quarantining would follow, along with monitoring of household contacts, Komatsu and other spokespeople suggested.

I asked whether the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) had provided guidance on how the department should handle the situation.

“As CDC is currently working at a fast pace to put out some recommendations and guidance, most jurisdictions that have any individuals potentially exposed, they’ve been in contact with CDC sometimes two, three times a day to answer our questions,” said Dr. Joel Terriquez, the medical director of the bureaus of Infectious Diseases Services and Immunization Services with the Arizona Department of Health Services.

“Guidance is currently being developed and an official recommendation will be coming out soon,” he added. Komatsu also confirmed that public-facing CDC guidance was forthcoming. When asked which CDC department was heading up the effort, he pointed to the Division of Global Migration Health within the National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases.

The health department emphasized that the risk to Arizonans remains low. “We just want to make sure that the message is clear,” Terriquez said. “This situation is very low risk to the general public.”

2026-05-07T21:02:01.134Z

As always: Vet your sources

A word of advice from your friendly neighborhood health editor: As investigations into the hantavirus cluster continue, emerging data may be incomplete and the narrative of who did what (and when) could also be fuzzy. A degree of uncertainty is expected in the midst of an unfolding investigation, because if all was known, there would be nothing to investigate.

With that in mind, be wary of bad actors, particularly on social media, who take advantage of uncertainty to sow doubt or stir up conspiracies. I understand the impulse to seek out more information, to pose questions when something is unclear or underexplained — but that is distinct from spreading misinformation and disinformation.

In short, if a given social media user’s main goal is to gain views and monetization, rather than to provide clarity and well-sourced expertise, their input is unlikely to serve you.

2026-05-07T20:29:47.641Z

Trump admin axed Andes virus research

Ten research centers that comprised the Centers for Research in Emerging Infectious Diseases (CREID) were terminated last year after their funder, the National Institutes of Health, deemed their work “unsafe” and “not a good use of taxpayer funding.” It turns out that one of those centers had a pilot program aimed at studying the Andes virus, which has now been implicated in the MV Hondius outbreak, Scientific American reported.

The pilot program was aimed at learning more about the inner workings of the Andes virus, including how it spreads from rodents to people. Some $100,000 would have likely been dedicated to this project in Argentina, sources told SciAm.

In the long run, the goal of CREID’s many projects was to better understand germs capable of jumping from animals to people in order to respond quickly and effectively to future outbreaks. While the Andes virus pilot program likely wouldn’t have stopped this cruise ship outbreak, its loss could very well undermine scientists’ broader efforts to understand hantaviruses and the threat they might pose in the future.

2026-05-07T19:44:02.118Z

Airline crewmember being tested for hantavirus

Earlier today, the Dutch outlet RTL Nieuws reported that an airline crewmember had been admitted to Amsterdam University Medical Center (UMC) after having brief contact with an infected person from MV Hondius.

The infected person — the woman whose husband was the first to die on board — had felt ill when she disembarked on the island of St. Helena. Her condition worsened during a flight from St. Helena to Johannesburg, South Africa. She then attempted to board a flight from Johannesburg to Amsterdam, but “due to the passenger’s health condition at the time, the crew decided not to allow the passenger to board the flight,” KLM has said.

The woman subsequently died and her case was later confirmed to be a hantavirus infection.

During her brief time on the Amsterdam-bound plane, the sick passenger interacted with the flight attendant who is now at Amsterdam UMC with mild symptoms of illness. Doctors are expecting to receive the attendant’s test results later today, which will reveal if she has a hantavirus infection, CNN reported.

(For background, sustained close contact is typically required for Andes virus infections to transmit between people, so it’s unclear whether this brief encounter would be particularly risky.)

headshot of nicoletta lanese

Nicoletta Lanese

Health Channel Editor
2026-05-07T18:12:46.848Z

Catching a killer — how to trace a rare and deadly virus

This image reveals some of the histopathologic details seen in a lymph node specimen that had been extracted from a patient suspected of a hantavirus illness.

(Image credit: CDC)

Andes virus outbreaks are rare, with only a handful documented since the 1990s. This makes investigations into clusters of cases like those associated with the MV Hondius tricky. However, one outbreak that hit southern Argentina’s village of Epuyen in 2018 may prove to be informative.

The Epuyen outbreak infected 34 people and led to 11 deaths due to hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, in which a hantavirus attacks the lungs.

According to a 2020 study published in The New England Journal of Medicine, the Epuyen cases stemmed from three separate superspreader events. The first occurred when the first infected person, or index patient, attended a birthday party with around 100 others.

The 68-year-old man, who was feverish and feeling poorly at the time, attended for about 90 minutes and passed the infection to several people who had been sitting near him. Additional cases followed as several of these individuals or their close contacts attended other events while sick.

In many cases, infected people passed on the virus on the first day they began feeling feverish, the study authors determined. That hints that the infection might be at its most contagious when those early symptoms emerge — meaning the close confines of a ship could be an ideal location for the virus to spread in that time window.

Ben Turner

Ben Turner

Acting Trending News Editor
2026-05-07T16:32:37.004Z

Clarity on cruise itinerary

An aerial photo of a white cruise ship in the middle of a blue ocean.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Various social media posts and videos have been casting suspicion on when the MV Hondius actually departed Ushuaia, Argentina. The WHO’s website notes April 1 as the departure date, while the Africa CDC website states March 20. So I reached out to the cruise operator, Oceanwide Expeditions, about the discrepancy.

A spokesperson shared that, from March 20 to March 30, the ship traveled from Ushuaia to Antarctica and back. Then, from April 1 to April 24, it traveled from Ushuaia to the island of St. Helena. Then, between April 24 and May 4, it traveled from St. Helena to Cape Verde.

When asked if any potential hantavirus cases were associated with that first leg of the trip, the spokesperson directed me to the WHO’s official statements. The earliest known symptomatic case was on April 6 and involved a man who had boarded the ship April 1.

Both the man and his wife — the second passenger to get sick — had traveled in Argentina, Chile and Uruguay prior to boarding, and officials currently suspect that that’s when they got exposed. Both individuals have since died.

2026-05-07T16:07:55.796Z

Viral videos of distressed passengers

When asked about videos of distressed cruise passengers circulating online, Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO’s interim director of epidemic and pandemic preparedness and prevention, confirmed that WHO officials had seen the videos.

“This is quite frightening for those that are on board,” she added, noting that health authorities are coordinating with the ship’s captain to ensure those on the ship receive the best medical and psychological care possible.

Additionally, once the medical status of everyone on board is assessed, the WHO will also coordinate with each person’s home country to safely repatriate them.

2026-05-07T16:03:26.167Z

Deceased passenger remains on board

The body of the third person to die in the outbreak — a woman who passed away on board May 2 after developing pneumonia — is still being stored on the MV Hondius. WHO officials are in contact with the cruise operators about safe storage and eventual transport of the remains.

2026-05-07T16:02:34.460Z

Genetic sequencing underway

Genetic material from the confirmed hantavirus cases is now being sequenced. This will enable experts to compare the genetics of the hantaviruses involved in this cluster to those that caused past outbreaks.

As of yet, there’s “no indication” that there’s anything particularly unusual about the hantaviruses themselves, but it is notable that the outbreak is taking place on a cruise ship, said Anaïs Legand, the WHO’s technical officer of viral hemorrhagic fevers. A ship is a unique environment where people from many places are in close quarters.

2026-05-07T15:59:29.217Z

People who have potentially been exposed to the virus are being “actively monitored,” according to Dr. Abdirahman Mahamud, director of the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Health Emergency Alert and Response Operations. What that looks like depends on the country where the case contacts are currently located; some may be quarantined in facilities, while others may receive a daily visit from healthcare workers, for instance, he said.

The WHO recommends that contacts be monitored for six weeks, as the incubation period ‪—‬ the time between when someone is exposed to the virus and when symptoms begin —‬ of hantavirus infections can be that long. Known cases that are symptomatic are being isolated and cared for in hospitals.

headshot of nicoletta lanese

Nicoletta Lanese

Health Editor

2026-05-07T15:56:01.218Z

Where did the infection come from?

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters at the news conference that the WHO is working with health authorities in Argentina to investigate where the first two people to contract the virus got infected. Those passengers, a husband and wife, marked the first two deaths associated with the outbreak.

Prior to boarding, “the first two cases traveled through Argentina, Chile and Uruguay, on a bird-watching trip, which included visits to sites where the species of rat known to carry Andes virus was present,” Ghebreyesus said.

The Andes virus is transmitted to humans mainly through contact with the long-tailed pygmy rice rat (Oligoryzomys longicaudatus). People may pick up the virus through exposure to the rat’s urine, feces or saliva. For instance, they may accidentally touch the rat’s feces and then touch their face, or breathe in viral particles that get released into the air when rodent droppings get disturbed in the environment.

Ben Turner

Ben Turner

Acting Trending News Editor
2026-05-07T14:34:48.938Z

“Viruses don’t care about politics”

World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus at the WHO headquarters in Geneva.

(Image credit: FABRICE COFFRINI/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

Both Argentina and the U.S. recently withdrew from the World Health Organization (WHO). In the face of this outbreak, “I think they will reconsider their positions,” said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the WHO’s director-general. “Viruses don’t care about our politics, they don’t care about our borders, and they don’t care about all the excuses that we may have.”

When asked whether U.S. health authorities are participating in the ongoing investigation, several WHO representatives confirmed that the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is providing helpful technical support and expertise and communicating with WHO leaders daily.

headshot of nicoletta lanese

Nicoletta Lanese

Health Editor

2026-05-07T14:33:52.292Z

World Health Organization says risk to the public is “low”

Maria Van Kerkhove looks on during a press conference at the World Health Organization's headquarters in Geneva

Maria Van Kerkhove at a WHO news conference.

(Image credit: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images)

The World Health Organization (WHO) just held a news conference to discuss the hantavirus cases.

The WHO has been working with collaborating centers to identify the type of virus behind the outbreak, as well as investigate suspected and confirmed cases and perform contact tracing. The agency has also been quick to quash fears that the outbreak could spark a global pandemic.

“This is not SARS-CoV-2 [the virus that causes COVID-19]. This is not the start of a COVID pandemic. This is an outbreak that we see on a ship,” Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO’s interim director of epidemic and pandemic preparedness and prevention, said at the news conference.

“This is not the same situation we were in six years ago,” she continued. “It [the Andes virus] doesn’t spread the same way like coronaviruses do. It’s very different. It’s that close, intimate contact that we’ve seen, and most hantaviruses don’t transmit between people at all.”

“The Andes virus, which has been identified here ‪—‬ we’ve seen some human-to-human transmission,” she added. “I want to reiterate [that] the actions that are being taken on board are precautionary to prevent any onward spread, and so there’s a lot that is being done right now to be able to try to minimize the risk even further.”

2026-05-07T14:29:02.908Z

What is hantavirus, and how risky is this outbreak?

An illustration of a blue translucent spiky sphere of a hantavirus molecule, with a 3D strand of DNA at the center. All in front of a blue background.

(Image credit: ROGER HARRIS/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY via Getty Images)

Hantaviruses are a family of viruses carried by rodents. Hantavirus infections in humans are relatively uncommon, but when they do occur, they can be dangerous, with fatality rates ranging between 1% and 50% depending on the type of hantavirus. No specific treatment exists to cure infections, but prompt medical care can improve patients’ chances of survival.

While most hantaviruses cannot pass between people, one specific type, known as the Andes virus, can. The Andes virus is the type of hantavirus that laboratory tests point to being behind this cluster. Health authorities are now working to analyze the virus’s DNA to compare its sequence to that of Andes viruses involved in past outbreaks.

The World Health Organization and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have said the risk posed to the public from this cluster remains low, although they continue to monitor the situation.

For more on the Andes virus, you can read health editor Nicoletta’s story here. And for more background information on hantaviruses, broadly, you can read this story.

Ben Turner

Ben Turner

Acting Trending News Editor

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