Hantavirus Risk to US Public Remains Low, CDC Says

By Ahmed Aboulenein and Michael Erman

WASHINGTON, ⁠May ⁠13 (Reuters) – The risk from ⁠hantavirus to the general public remains very ​low, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has ‌more than 100 staff members ‌actively working on the outbreak, an official with the ⁠government ⁠health agency said on Wednesday.

“To the American public, please know ​we are here to protect your health. Based on current information, the risk” to the general population remains low, Dr. David Fitter, ​the incident manager for the CDC’s hantavirus response, said during ⁠a media ⁠call.

The Atlanta-based CDC ⁠is ​conducting public health assessments on site in Nebraska, where 16 of the ​18 passengers from ⁠the cruise ship hit by a hantavirus outbreak were flown to and quarantined on Monday, said Dr. Brendan Jackson, the CDC team lead in Nebraska.

The group had been aboard the ⁠MV Hondius, a luxury expedition cruise ship linked to an outbreak ⁠of the Andes virus, the only hantavirus species known to be capable of limited person-to-person spread. Hantavirus is usually spread by wild rodents.

The initial test results for one passenger who officials said on Monday had tested positive for hantavirus and was placed in a Nebraska biocontainment unit, were inconclusive, Fitter said.

The passenger is currently being ⁠tested again, and the results should be available in one or two days, he said.

(Reporting by Ahmed Aboulenein in Washington and Michael Erman in New York; Additional reporting ​by Christian Martinez in Los Angeles; Editing by ​Franklin Paul and Paul Simao)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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