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90-Second Read: Argentina to expand Hantavirus search to Mendoza Province

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Lucas Ferreira

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Published June 6, 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.

Argentina will expand its search for Hantavirus-carrying rodents to western Mendoza Province as part of an investigation into a deadly cruise ship outbreak in April, the Health Ministry said Friday. The MV Hondius was sailing from Ushuaia in Argentina's south to Cape Verde when its journey was disrupted after three passengers died following a Hantavirus outbreak. Scientists from the institute will next travel to Mendoza Province to conduct further investigations with experts from the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) from June 8 to 12, Argentina's Health Ministry announced Friday. Specialists from Argentina, joined by experts from the United States, will extend rodent analysis to Mendoza.

To date, the World Health Organization has recorded 13 confirmed or probable cases linked to the cruise ship incident, including the three deaths. The virus is endemic in several provinces in Argentina, though not in Mendoza. Tierra del Fuego has meanwhile not had a case of Hantavirus since reporting became mandatory 30 years ago. There are no vaccines or specific treatments for the rare disease.

In May, scientists from the ANLIS-Malbrán Institute, Argentina's leading centre for infectious diseases, travelled to Ushuaia to determine whether rodents in the area carried the rare respiratory disease. Results from over 100 rodents captured in Tierra del Fuego Province in May were still being analysed, the statement added. Hantavirus typically spreads from the urine, faeces and saliva of infected rodents. According to the University of Mendoza, the province "currently has no confirmed local circulation of the Andes virus." But there is "a potential presence of the reservoir rodent," it added.

Source reference

Original reporting

Based on reporting from Buenos Aires Times. Read the original source for full details.

Source published Jun 5, 6:49 PM EDT. Hantavirus Now reviewed reporting from Buenos Aires Times and summarized the key points below.

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