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'Patient zero' in deadly hantavirus cruise outbreak identified as birdwatcher who visited landfill known as 'the end of the world'
Vt.co and 51 more
- US states coordinate a multiagency response to the Hondius hantavirus outbreak, with plans for medical repatriation and quarantine of Americans aboard the vessel.
- Public health officials say the overall risk to the general public remains very low as monitoring continues for close contacts and potential exposures linked to the Hondius.
- Nine U.S. residents across six states are being monitored as part of contact tracing, with no confirmed public cases yet identified in New Jersey.
- Andes virus remains the only hantavirus known to transmit between people, but such transmission is rare and typically requires close, prolonged contact.
- Public health guidance is evolving as new facts emerge, with authorities coordinating across local, national, and international partners.
- A Dutch flight attendant exposed to a hantavirus patient tested negative, underscoring a low level of public risk from travel-related exposure.
- Spanish authorities anticipate receiving the hantavirus-stricken cruise ship, marking a coordinated international response as Tenerife prepares to handle passengers.
- Quarantine readiness at the Nebraska Medical Center includes dedicated spaces, daily vital-sign checks, and access to infectious disease specialists for evacuees.
- CDC has activated its Emergency Operations Center and classified the outbreak as level 3, signaling formal cross-border coordination of the response.
- Public health messaging emphasizes hantavirus symptoms and a high fatality potential, advocating a monitored, symptom-based approach rather than broad public exposure.
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