WHO’s May 4 notice listed seven MV Hondius linked hantavirus cases and three deaths; later reports cite eight cases, but WHO and UN reporting say the global public health risk remains low rather than pandemic like. The response includes WHO outbreak coordination, Africa CDC monitoring, laboratory confirmation, inves...

Create a landscape editorial hero image for this Studio Global article: MV Hondius hantavirus outbreak: current status, deaths, and international response. Article summary: The MV Hondius hantavirus cluster has caused three deaths; WHO listed seven cases as of May 4, while later reports cite eight.. Topic tags: hantavirus, public health, infectious disease, travel health, cruise ships. Reference image context from search candidates: Reference image 1: visual subject "The World Health Organization (WHO) has confirmed five infections and three deaths, warning that more cases could still emerge because the" source context "Where is the MV Hondius? Follow live the position of the hantavirus ship | Euronews" Reference image 2: visual subject "Three people - a Dutch couple and a German national - have died in the outbreak on the MV Hondius. Four others confirmed to be infected, two" source con
A rare hantavirus cluster linked to the Dutch-flagged expedition cruise ship MV Hondius has become a multi-country public-health investigation. The event is serious: people have died, at least one patient was critically ill in WHO’s initial public accounting, and authorities are watching for additional cases. But WHO-linked reporting has also stressed that the outbreak is assessed as a low global public-health risk and is not being treated as “another COVID” scenario [2][
3].
The clearest official baseline is WHO’s Disease Outbreak News notice. WHO said it was notified on 2 May 2026 of a cluster of severe respiratory illness aboard a cruise ship carrying 147 passengers and crew [2]. As of 4 May 2026, WHO had identified seven cases linked to the event: two laboratory-confirmed hantavirus cases and five suspected cases [
2].
WHO’s notice reported three deaths, one critically ill patient, and three people with mild symptoms among those seven cases [2]. Illness onset occurred between 6 and 28 April 2026, with symptoms described as fever, gastrointestinal symptoms, rapid progression to pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome, and shock .
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WHO’s May 4 notice listed seven MV Hondius linked hantavirus cases and three deaths; later reports cite eight cases, but WHO and UN reporting say the global public health risk remains low rather than pandemic like.
WHO’s May 4 notice listed seven MV Hondius linked hantavirus cases and three deaths; later reports cite eight cases, but WHO and UN reporting say the global public health risk remains low rather than pandemic like. The response includes WHO outbreak coordination, Africa CDC monitoring, laboratory confirmation, investigation across affected countries, and medical evacuation of seriously ill passengers.
The main uncertainty is the live case count and source of exposure, with public reports differing between seven and eight linked cases.
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On 2 May 2026, a cluster of passengers with severe respiratory illness aboard a cruise ship was reported to the World Health Organization. The ship is carrying 147 passengers and crew. As of 4 May 2026, seven cases (two laboratory confirmed cases of hantavi...
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Hantavirus scare on cruise ship MV Hondius: WHO rules out Covid-like crisis ... As on Wednesday, eight cases have been reported from the Dutch-flagged MV Hondius cruise ship, out of which three have been laboratory-confirmed as Andes hantavirus. The confirm...
| Key question | Best supported answer |
|---|---|
| How many cases are officially listed by WHO? | Seven as of 4 May 2026 [ |
| How many deaths have been reported? | Three in WHO’s notice [ |
| How many were confirmed vs. suspected? | Two laboratory-confirmed and five suspected in WHO’s notice [ |
| How many people were aboard? | 147 passengers and crew [ |
| What were the main symptoms? | Fever, gastrointestinal symptoms, pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome, and shock [ |
The case count may have evolved after WHO’s initial notice. Euronews reported that WHO had confirmed an eighth linked case, and another report cited eight cases, including three laboratory-confirmed Andes hantavirus infections [1][
5]. Because the most detailed official WHO notice listed seven cases as of 4 May, the safest reading is that at least seven cases and three deaths are officially supported, while later reports suggest the total may have risen to eight [
1][
2][
5].
UN reporting based on WHO communications said the MV Hondius outbreak poses a low global public-health risk and is “not the start of another COVID pandemic” [3]. That assessment does not mean the illness is mild: WHO’s own notice included three deaths and one critically ill patient [
2]. It means WHO is not describing the cluster as a broadly spreading global threat [
3].
Hantavirus is usually transmitted to humans from rodents, and it is not an illness typically associated with cruise ships [9][
12]. The added concern in this event is that later reports identified the strain as Andes hantavirus, a variant associated in public reports with possible human-to-human transmission in some circumstances [
1][
5][
14]. That helps explain why public-health agencies are continuing monitoring and investigation even while the overall global risk is described as low [
3][
8][
10].
The response is international because the ship, passengers, crew, route, medical care, and notifications involve multiple jurisdictions. UN reporting said the first alert came from the United Kingdom, which notified WHO under the International Health Regulations after passengers developed severe illness [3]. Africa CDC said the MV Hondius had departed Ushuaia, Argentina, on 20 March 2026 for the Canary Islands via Cabo Verde, and that it was closely monitoring the cluster with relevant partners [
8].
Authorities’ response includes several parallel tracks:
Several important details are still developing. The exact source of exposure has not been publicly settled; Euronews reported that the origin of the cases was still under investigation [1]. Public reporting also differs on whether the current total is seven or eight cases, and whether all newer cases have been fully reflected in WHO’s detailed outbreak accounting [
1][
2][
5].
The bottom line: the MV Hondius outbreak is deadly and unusual, and it has triggered a real international response. But based on the available WHO and UN reporting, it is being handled as a serious multi-country cluster—not as a COVID-style pandemic threat [2][
3][
8].
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The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) is closely monitoring reports of a cluster of hantavirus infections identified among individuals travelling on the international cruise ship MV Hondius, which departed Ushuaia, Argentina, on...
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