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.

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






