Hantavirus updates: Canadian cruise ship passenger tests positive for hantavirus
All of the 18 American ship passengers are at the Nebraska quarantine facility.
The total number of confirmed and probable cases of hantavirus of those who were onboard the MV Hondius cruise ship stands at 11, including two people confirmed to have died from the virus and one person who remains suspected to have died from the virus.
No cases of Andes hantavirus have been confirmed in the U.S. The eighteen American ship passengers are being monitored at the quarantine unit at the University of Nebraska Medical Center.
Key Headlines
- Canadian cruise ship passenger tests positive for hantavirus
- Health officials in Washington state tracking hantavirus case unrelated to cruise ship
- 2 cruise ship passengers originally in Atlanta now at Nebraska quarantine facility
- Suspected hantavirus case at upstate New York high school, not linked to cruise ship
- US has no cases of Andes hantavirus
What is hantavirus and how does it spread?
Here's what you need to know about hantavirus including what it is, how it spreads, how it's treated and if there are any prevention methods:
What is hantavirus?
Hantaviruses are a family of viruses that can cause serious illnesses and death, according to the CDC.
How does hantavirus spread?
Hantaviruses may also spread from person to person, but that also is rare and only suspected for one subtype from South America, according to the WHO.
Read more about hantavirus here.
Spanish national tests positive
One of the Spanish passengers isolated at Gómez Ulla Hospital in Madrid has tested provisionally positive, bringing the total likely number of hantaviruses case to 11, according to Spanish Health Minister Monica Garcia.
The passenger does not have symptoms, Garcia said. The passenger is isolate in good condition and is under constant monitoring, Garcia said.
“The other 13 passengers have tested provisionally negative. In the coming hours, we will know the definitive results,” Garcia added.
Ship sets sail after evacuating passengers, crew
The MV Hondius cruise ship has set sail from Spain after evacuating passengers and crew from 23 countries, Spanish health minister Monica Garcia said.
"Mission accomplished. Thank you to everyone who made this possible. We continue working to protect public health,” Garcia said.
The ship still has "around 30 people, the crew and two health workers, and they will need our support throughout their journey until they reach Rotterdam,” said Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization. “... We will continue to monitor and support them in any way possible.”
8 more people in isolation in French hospital, prime minister says
Eight French nationals who shared a flight with a sick person 15 days ago are now in isolation at a hospital in France, French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu said. None of the eight have symptoms, he said.
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This is in additional to the five French nationals who returned to France on Sunday from the cruise ship and are in isolation at Bichat Hospital in Paris. Four are still testing negative, while the one who tested positive for hantavirus is in intensive care in stable condition, the prime minister said.
-ABC News' Will Gretsky
Eligible passengers who opt to go home won't fly commercial: CDC
In the coming days, as the cruise ship passengers decide whether to stay at the University of Nebraska quarantine facility or self-monitor at home, those who opt to go home will not fly on a commercial flight, an official from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told ABC News. Passengers who opt to go home will have been assessed by health officials for any signs of illness.
-ABC News’ Youri Benadjaoud