Suspected Hantavirus Outbreak on Atlantic Cruise Ship Kills Three

May 04, 2026 - 14:13
Updated: 29 days ago
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Suspected Hantavirus Outbreak on Atlantic Cruise Ship Kills Three
Photo source: https://www.foxnews.com/health/hantavirus-deaths-cruise-ship...

A suspected hantavirus outbreak on a cruise ship in the Atlantic has killed at least three people and prompted an international investigation.

The World Health Organization stated on X that one case of hantavirus infection has been confirmed, while five additional suspected cases are pending. Of the six people affected, three have died and one is currently in intensive care in South Africa.

Hantaviruses are a group of viruses primarily carried by rodents that can cause severe respiratory or renal diseases in humans, according to Dr. Rhys Parry, a molecular virologist at the University of Queensland in Australia. Most hantaviruses found in North, Central and South America can cause hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "The hantaviruses that are found throughout the United States are not known to spread between people," the CDC stated. HPS has a nearly 40 percent fatality rate in those infected.

Hantaviruses typically spread when humans breathe in virus particles from disturbed rodent urine, droppings or nesting materials, Parry told Fox News Digital. The CDC lists these potential mechanisms of spread: breathing in contaminated air when cleaning up after rodents; touching contaminated objects and then touching the nose or mouth; getting bitten or scratched by an infected rodent; and eating food contaminated with the virus.

Dr. Marc Siegel, clinical professor of medicine at NYU Langone Health and Fox News senior medical analyst, said hantavirus can spread via dust from rodents' saliva, urine and places they touch. The most common type of rodent to carry it in the U.S. is the deer mouse, he noted. Most hantavirus cases occur in rural areas, where rodents are more likely to enter homes or barns, the CDC noted. Both experts agreed that hantavirus infections are incredibly rare. Siegel added that it rarely affects humans "because only some of the rodents have it, and they don't all come into contact — but one-third to one-half of cases are fatal."

Early symptoms of hantavirus include fever, muscle aches, fatigue and gastrointestinal issues that appear anywhere from one to eight weeks after exposure, according to Parry. "These progress to serious respiratory symptoms like coughing, shortness of breath and fluid in the lungs four to 10 days later," he said. Sin Nombre virus is the most common hantavirus in the United States, which causes hantavirus pulmonary syndrome with a mortality rate of approximately 38 percent. "It typically becomes fatal when the lungs fill with fluid, leading to respiratory failure and insufficient oxygen reaching vital organs," Parry noted.

There is no specific antiviral treatment for hantavirus, the expert said, although early intensive care with oxygen therapy and supportive measures is crucial. "Early intensive medical care is critical because patients who have sudden acute disease can rapidly become severely sick and die," the CDC states. "Even with medical care, 30 percent to 40 percent of people who develop hantavirus pulmonary syndrome will not survive."

"Although there is no cure for hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, it is important to seek medical care when short of breath, because the patient may need support from a mechanical ventilator or extra-corporeal membrane oxygenator (ECMO) machine to deliver enough oxygen to their body," Dr. Sonja Bartolome, an expert in pulmonology and critical care at UT Southwestern Medical Center, told Fox News Digital.

It can be prevented by keeping wild mice and rats out of homes, cleaning up rodent waste quickly when encountered, and staying away from areas infested with rodents, Bartolome said. "When cleaning up rodent waste, it is important to wear rubber gloves, use disinfectant and wash your hands afterward."

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