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WHO declares cruise-linked hantavirus outbreak officially over

3 articles
3 sources
0% diversity
Updated 23h ago
Key Topics & People
hantavirus *World Health Organization Argentina Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus South Atlantic Ocean

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3
Public Health(3)
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Avg Sensationalism:Low

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Jul 2 Evening

3 articles|3 sources
hantavirus outbreakworld health organizationcruise shipquarantinemv hondius
Public Health(3)
Al Jazeera23h ago

WHO declares cruise-linked hantavirus outbreak officially over

The World Health Organization (WHO) has declared a hantavirus outbreak officially over. This outbreak, linked to the cruise ship MV Hondius, infected 13 people and resulted in three deaths. The final individual exposed to the virus has completed quarantine and tested negative. Health authorities tracked over 650 contacts across 33 countries and territories. The cruise ship sailed from Argentina on April 1, visiting remote South Atlantic islands before reaching Tenerife and eventually docking in Rotterdam on May 18. The WHO will continue studying the outbreak and the Andes hantavirus strain to aid in future prevention and treatment.

MeasuredFactual1 source
Positive
South China Morning PostYesterday

WHO declares cruise ship-linked hantavirus outbreak over

The World Health Organization has declared an end to a hantavirus outbreak linked to the cruise ship MV Hondius. The outbreak, which caused international alarm, concluded after the last individual exposed to the virus completed their quarantine and tested negative. The incident resulted in 12 confirmed and one probable case of hantavirus, with three deaths. The ship departed from Ushuaia, Argentina, on April 1, traveling through the South Atlantic before passengers were evacuated in Tenerife, Spain. Scientists are now beginning their work to understand the lessons learned from this outbreak, which triggered a global health alert.

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Neutral
The Guardian - World NewsYesterday

WHO declares hantavirus outbreak linked to cruise ship over

The World Health Organization has declared a hantavirus outbreak linked to the cruise ship MV Hondius over. The outbreak, which involved the rare Andes virus strain, infected 13 people and resulted in three deaths. The cruise ship departed from Argentina on April 1st. The WHO's declaration came after the last identified contact of an exposed person completed quarantine and tested negative for the virus. The Andes virus strain typically circulates in Argentina and Chile.

MeasuredFactual1 source
Positive

Key Claims

factual

WHO declares hantavirus outbreak over as final exposed individual completes quarantine and tests negative.

— World Health Organization

statistic

The outbreak infected 13 people and killed three, involving the rare Andes hantavirus strain.

factual

The cruise ship Hondius sailed from Argentina on April 1.

statistic

More than 650 contacts were identified and followed up by health authorities in 33 countries and territories.

— Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus

factual

Hantavirus spreads primarily through rodents, infecting people through contact with rats, mice or their urine, droppings and saliva.