More cases of a deadly rat-borne virus are likely on the way – as fears mount that hundreds of people may have come in contact with infectious carriers of the illness.
The World Health Organization has insisted the hantavirus outbreak on board the MV Hondius cruise ship will not become a pandemic, despite four continents now being scoured for missing passengers.
It comes as medics today confirmed a patient in the Netherlands had been infected with the disease.
‘The species of hantavirus involved in this case is the Andes virus, which is found in Latin America… Given the incubation period of the Andes virus, which can be up to six weeks, it’s possible that more cases may be reported,’ WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told journalists in Geneva.
Meanwhile the WHO confirmed the UK was the first to raise the alarm about the disease which has spread across the world following a ‘cluster of passengers with severe respiratory illness’.
Live blog closed
WHO warns of MORE hantavirus cases: Here’s what we know so far
Given the incubation period of the Andes virus, which can be up to six weeks, it’s possible that more cases may be reported,” he said, referring to the rare strain detected aboard the Hondius, which can be transmitted between humans.
We believe this will be a limited outbreak if the public health measures are implemented and solidarity shown across all countries.
Watch: How the cruise ship hantavirus became a global health scare
Disease-struck cruise ship still ‘days away from docking’
Origins of hantavirus still unknown, Argentine health ministry insists
With the information provided so far by the countries involved and the national agencies participating, it is not possible to confirm the origin of the infection.
An elderly man developed a fever… then walked into a birthday party: How deadly hantavirus wreaked havoc in Argentinian village eight years ago
US health officials say risk to the American public is ‘low’
Watch: WHO reacts to fears of a COVID-style hantavirus pandemic
What we can learn from the 2018 hantavirus outbreak
Hantavirus’s long incubation period could create several ‘super spreaders’
30 passengers left disease-struck ship in Saint Helena, cruise operator says
We are working to establish details of all passengers and crew who embarked and disembarked on various stops of MV Hondius since March 20.
The WHO insists the public health risk from the virus is low – but how far is that actually true?
Even if most of the five, possibly eight, cases on board the cruise ship caught it from each other, it will have been close contact that did the spreading.
Here’s why: zoonotic agents are often very good at killing people –Ebola, Marburg, Nipah, Hendra, Sars and Hanta have high fatality rates – but are not so good at infecting people.
It takes time for a virus to evolve a good match of its proteins to the receptors on the cells of a new host.
-
Spain say risk of cruise ship to public health is ‘very low’
-
Hunt for British passenger who disembarked in St Helena
-
Top story: Hantavirus cruise ship threw ‘a big barbecue as if nothing happened’
-
Anger in Tenerife as hantavirus cruise heads to the Canary Islands
-
What we know about hantavirus on the Hondius
-
Watch: How the cruise ship hantavirus became a global health scare
-
UK first to raise alarm about hantavirus outbreak
-
Hantavirus outbreak not expected to become an epidemic, WHO say



