Washington / Geneva / Atlantic Ocean — May 13, 2026
Global health authorities are closely monitoring a rare hantavirus outbreak linked to an international cruise ship, as confirmed cases rise and quarantine measures continue across multiple countries.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO) and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the outbreak originated aboard the Dutch-flagged expedition cruise vessel MV Hondius, which departed from Argentina in early April 2026.
As of the latest official updates, at least 9–11 total infections have been reported, 3 deaths have been confirmed, Several additional passengers remain under investigation or observation, and cases include both laboratory-confirmed Andes hantavirus infections and suspected infections.
Health authorities say the Andes strain is of particular concern because it is one of the few hantavirus variants that can rarely spread between humans through prolonged close contact.
Authorities in multiple countries have launched coordinated containment measures. 17–18 passengers, including American citizens, were evacuated and placed under quarantine in the United States (Nebraska and Georgia facilities). Additional exposed individuals are being monitored across Europe and North America. The WHO has recommended extended monitoring (up to 42 days) due to the virus’s incubation period.
The CDC has deployed epidemiology teams to assist with contact tracing and exposure assessment and has classified the situation as a Level 3 emergency response (partial activation)
WHO has provided a statement saying risk remains low for the public. Despite heightened attention, health officials emphasize that there is no evidence of widespread community transmission. The outbreak is contained within a closed travel environment (cruise ship exposure). And global public risk remains low at this time
WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus urged countries to remain vigilant, citing the possibility of additional cases due to incubation delays and delayed symptom onset
What is hantavirus?
Hantavirus is a rare rodent-borne virus transmitted mainly through:
Rodent urine
Droppings (feces)
Saliva
In rare cases (notably Andes strain), it may spread between humans through close prolonged contact.
It can cause:
Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS)
Severe respiratory failure
Kidney-related complications in some strains
There is no specific cure or antiviral treatment, but early hospitalization improves survival chances.
Why this outbreak is being closely watched
Experts say the situation is significant not because of scale, but because:
It involves a confined cruise ship environment
It includes a strain with limited human-to-human transmission potential
It has led to multi-country quarantine coordination
However, epidemiologists stress this is not comparable to COVID-19, and no evidence currently suggests pandemic risk.
Current outlook
Health authorities continue to:
Test and monitor exposed passengers
Conduct genetic sequencing of viral samples
Trace all international contacts from the cruise itinerary
Officials expect additional isolated cases may still appear, but containment measures are considered strong.
Bottom line
The 2026 hantavirus outbreak remains a contained but closely monitored international health event, centered on a cruise ship cluster with limited transmission and no evidence of broader community spread.