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Hantavirus live updates: WHO hunts for source of virus

The overall public risk remains low, the WHO said.

The total number of confirmed and probable cases of hantavirus of those who were onboard the MV Hondius cruise ship stands at 10, 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.

May 8, 10:44 am

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.

Stock photo of a colorized electron micrograph of the Hantavirus.
Alfred Pasieka/Science Photo Lib/STOCK PHOTO/Getty Images

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.

1 hour and 53 minutes ago

Suspected hantavirus case at upstate New York high school, not linked to cruise ship

Officials in Ontario County in upstate New York said they're “investigating a suspected locally acquired hantavirus case” involving a Geneva High School student. Geneva is about 45 miles southeast of Rochester.

The Ontario County Public Health Department stressed that the case is not linked to the cruise ship and “there is no risk to the general public.” Hantavirus strains in the U.S. don’t spread from person-to-person, the health department said, and is only “spread through mouse and rodent droppings, especially when urine, feces, or nesting materials become aerosolized during cleaning."

The Geneva City School District said "there is no evidence of risk to other students or staff."

The school district said it's "continuing to work closely with the Ontario County Department of Health and will continue to follow any guidance provided by public health officials."

-ABC News’ Matt Foster

2 hours and 11 minutes ago

US has no cases of Andes hantavirus

The U.S. currently has no cases of the Andes hantavirus, officials with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said at a briefing Friday.

The Andes version of hantavirus does not pass easily between people, and requires close, prolonged exposure, said the CDC’s incident manager for hantavirus, Dr. David Fitter. The CDC only recommends testing symptomatic people, Fitter said.

He said anyone with high-risk exposure should follow strict quarantine protocols. He classified high-risk exposure as anyone who was still on the cruise ship between May 5 and May 10, as well as anyone who had close, prolonged contact with someone who has Andes hantavirus, including sitting on a plane near someone with hantavirus.

A boat sails beside the cruise ship, MV Hondius, hit by Hantavirus as it is anchored off Cape Verde port, in Praia Port, Cape Verde, May 5, 2026.
Reuters TV via Reuters

CDC officials said they will not offer any updates on the conditions of the 16 cruise ship passengers currently in quarantine in Nebraska, including if they are currently symptomatic, citing privacy.

-ABC News’ Eric Strauss

11:56 AM EDT

WHO hunts for hantavirus source

The World Health Organization is not considering declaring an international health emergency because the organization still believes the hantavirus outbreak is contained and the overall public risk remains low, WHO official Maria Van Kerkhove said on Friday.

The WHO said there's no evidence that the virus changed to become more transmissible or more severe.

Passengers are disembarked from the hantavirus-stricken cruise ship MV Hondius at the port of Granadilla in Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain, May 10, 2026.
AP

An international study involving around 20 countries is being launched to better understand how long people stay infectious and how long the virus can stay detectable in the body, according to the WHO.

The WHO is also working with colleagues "in Argentina, in Chile, in Uruguay and around the world" to understand the origin of the hantavirus outbreak, Kerkhove said.

Kerkhove said the teams in Argentina are looking at the movements of the first cases and past hantavirus outbreaks in South America, including where the virus was found in humans and rodents.

She said this is "pure field epidemiology" and that WHO hopes to report more “very, very soon.”

WHO is also tracing people and possible exposures connected to Saint Helena, Chile, Uruguay and South Africa as the organization tries to piece together the route of the outbreak.

-ABC News’ Dada Jovanovic

10:47 AM EDT

American doctor who initially tested positive says further testing shows 'no evidence that I've had hantavirus'

The American doctor who was on the ship and initially tested positive has since tested negative and says "there's no evidence that I've had hantavirus."

A doctor from the biocontainment unit in Nebraska said the initial test was most likely a falsely positive, based on further testing.

Dr. Steve Kornfeld is shown in this undated file photo. Dr. Kornfeld spoke with ABC News while aboard the M/V Hondius.
Courtesy Dr. Steve Kornfeld

Dr. Stephen Kornfeld -- the only American to test positive for hantavirus -- came down with flu-like symptoms on the cruise ship, and on Monday he was admitted to the University of Nebraska Medical Center's biocontainment unit following a positive test, officials said. The Bend, Oregon, resident has since tested negative and was cleared to relocate to Nebraska's quarantine unit, where 15 other passengers from the cruise ship who do not have symptoms are being monitored.

"I physically feel great -- I have felt great for many, many days," Kornfeld told ABC News. "Emotionally I feel wonderful. It's nice to be negative for hantavirus."

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