WHO confirms Hantavirus outbreak on cruise ship MV Hondius poses low global risk

Eight cases have been confirmed aboard the MV Hondius, which is currently en route to the Canary Islands

Staff Writer
World Health Organization (WHO)
Image: Reuters

Article summary

AI Generated

The WHO has allayed fears of a hantavirus pandemic, stating it does not spread like COVID-19. Most strains aren't human-to-human transmissible. The current outbreak on the MV Hondius, linked to the Andes virus, poses a low risk, confined to the ship's passengers, with precautionary measures in place.

Key points

  • WHO states hantavirus is not a new pandemic and doesn't spread like COVID-19.
  • Most hantaviruses aren't human-to-human transmissible; risk is low.
  • Three deaths on MV Hondius, but outbreak risk remains confined.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has cautioned against overstating the risks of hantavirus, confirming that the disease does not represent the beginning of a new pandemic and does not spread in the manner that COVID-19 did.

At a press conference in Geneva, Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO’s acting director for epidemic and pandemic preparedness and prevention, said that most hantaviruses are not transmitted between humans.

“Most hantaviruses are not transmitted between humans,” Van Kerkhove stated, adding that the public health risk remains low both globally and in the Canary Islands, where the cruise ship MV Hondius is currently headed.

Hantavirus on MV Hondius: WHO rules out pandemic as death toll reaches three

The WHO confirmed that the current outbreak is linked to the Andes virus – the only known strain of hantavirus capable of transmission between humans, and only through close and prolonged contact, particularly in indoor spaces.

The organisation confirmed that the risk remains confined to the passengers of the vessel.

Advertisement

Precautionary measures are currently in place aboard the ship. These include:

  • The isolation of those who have been infected
  • The disinfection of cabins
  • The deployment of a health expert to the vessel
  • The provision of thousands of diagnostic kits

To date, the WHO has recorded eight cases linked to the ship, of which three have been fatal. Despite the deaths, the WHO’s overall public health risk assessment for the outbreak remains low.