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Video American passenger aboard Hantavirus ship details 42 days in quarantine‘No room for error': UNMC reflects as quarantine ends for Hantavirus cruise ship passengersVideo Travel blogger documents journey on cruise ship with Hantavirus outbreakVideo American passenger aboard Hantavirus ship details 42 days in quarantine‘No room for error': UNMC reflects as quarantine ends for Hantavirus cruise ship passengersVideo Travel blogger documents journey on cruise ship with Hantavirus outbreak

90-Second Read: American who was on doomed MV Hondius cruise reveals what it's like under 42-day Hantavirus quarantine

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Lucas Ferreira

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Published May 17, 2026

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This is a simplified summary of outside reporting. Hantavirus Now did not independently report the original story. Read the original source for full details.This is a simplified summary of outside reporting. Hantavirus Now did not independently report the original story. Read the original source for full details.

One of the Americans who was aboard the cruise doomed by a deadly Hantavirus outbreak gave an inside look at what the strict 42-day isolation period inside the country's top quarantine hospital is like and recalled the final days of the ill-fated voyage. The MV Hondius was docked in Argentina when one of the passengers, Leo Schilperoord, 69, was found to have contracted what is believed to be an Andes strain of the Hantavirus during his pursuit of rare birds in South America prior to the trip. At least one American initially tested positive for the Hantavirus, with a second showing mild symptoms, according to the Department of Health and Human Services.

Jake Rosmarin, a Boston-based travel influencer, said the trip aboard the MV Hondius served as a once-in-a-lifetime journey that turned into a nightmare during the final days of the cruise when the disease claimed three lives. Rosmarin was among the people on board the doomed boat sharing the experience on social media after the ship reached Cape Verde and was not allowed to disembark for fear of a greater outbreak. Now back in the US and on his seventh day of isolation at the University of Nebraska Medical Center's National Quarantine Unit, in Omaha, Rosmarin said there's nothing to do but wait for the 42-day quarantine period to end.

Rosmarin, who did not contract the virus, said the 17 Americans at the facility must remain inside their rooms, with individual ventilation systems in place to prevent any cross-contamination. Stephen Kornfeld, the American who tested positive, has since tested negative, with officials believing he only exhibited a false positive after coming down with flu-like symptoms on the cruise. The only human contact he has is with medical staff during the morning and evening check-ins.

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Original reporting

Based on reporting from New York Post. Read the original source for full details.

Source published May 17, 10:43 PM EDT. Hantavirus Now reviewed reporting from New York Post and summarized the key points below.

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