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Health authorities are investigating three deaths and several illnesses aboard a cruise ship in the Atlantic Ocean caused by the hantavirus, a family of viruses carried by rodents like rats and mice.
Hantavirus is typically transmitted to humans by inhaling airborne particles from rodent droppings and urine. But the strain detected on the ship, known as the Andes virus, has been associated with “limited human-to-human transmission” in previous outbreaks, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
Still, health officials emphasize that the risk to the general public is low.
“This is not the start of an epidemic, this is not the start of a pandemic,” the WHO’s Maria Van Kerkhove said at a May 7 news conference.
The ship’s operator has said that all sick passengers have been transported off the boat and that no symptomatic individuals remain on board. The operator also says it is working “to establish details of all passengers and crew who embarked and disembarked on various stops.”
The ship, carrying nearly 150 people, left Argentina on April 1 for a cruise that included visits to Antarctica, the Falkland Islands and other stops. It is now headed to the Canary Islands.
Thirty passengers disembarked on the island of St. Helena on April 24; six of them were from the U.S., and all have been contacted by the ship’s operator and are being monitored.
U.S. health officials say they are closely following the situation. “Our top priority remains the health and safety of all U.S. passengers,” the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said on May 6.
This is the second time in roughly a year that hantavirus has been in the news. Last year, officials in New Mexico confirmed that Betsy Arakawa, an accomplished musician and the wife of Gene Hackman, died at age 65 from complications of hantavirus.
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