WHO says MV Hondius hantavirus won’t spark pandemic

Get the Health newsletter
Daily health & science — research, biotech, public health, the studies worth knowing. Free.
- WHO says the outbreak on MV Hondius is unlikely to become an epidemic or pandemic.
- WHO confirmed five cases, three suspected, and three deaths, and reported that patients in the Netherlands and South Africa are improving.
- Andes virus was identified as the pathogen, the only hantavirus known to spread human‑to‑human and causing a disease with up to 50% mortality.
- Maria Van Kerkhove emphasized that the situation is not COVID‑19 or influenza and does not signal the start of an epidemic.
- Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the incubation period is six weeks and that contact tracing and international cooperation will break the chain of transmission.
Why it matters: Travelers and cruise operators avoid costly shutdowns, while health authorities gain confidence to focus resources on targeted isolation and monitoring rather than mass panic, and patients benefit from timely care.




