90-Second Read: France Hantavirus update: contact cases continue to test negative
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Elena Park
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Published May 20, 2026

These contact cases continue to test negative for Hantavirus, confirmed health minister Stéphanie Rist in her most recent update on the matter. An emergency decree passed last week allows for up to 42 days of isolation for Hantavirus contact cases in France, as recommended by the World Health Organization. A 73-year old French woman who was on the MV Hondius ship tested positive for Hantavirus soon after arrival in France, and is in critical condition at Paris' Bichat hospital. The 26 individuals consist of four patients on the MV Hondius cruise ship where the Hantavirus outbreak originated, as well as 22 French nationals who caught one of two flights alongside a Dutch woman who was unaware she was infected with the disease.
In contrast, the Hantavirus outbreak on the MV Hondius cruise ship was of the 'Andes-strain', a variant with a fatality rate of up to 50% and crucially, the only form of the illness that is transmissible between humans. Researchers from the Pasteur Institute have studied the strain responsible for the cruise ship outbreak, and following genomic analysis confirmed it is identical to the Andes-strain Hantavirus responsible for previous outbreaks in South America. Sales of protective masks increased fifty-fold last week in France, said President of 'Masque français' Emmanuel Nizard to Europe 1, as concerns grew over Hantavirus spread and a possible return to a Covid-style pandemic. The individuals are isolated at hospitals across the country and will remain quarantined until at least May 26, when they will be reassessed for potential signs of the disease.
However, any 'pretransmission' of the disease from before the quarantine period has been ruled out, meaning there is no risk that the virus is circulating throughout France. Health authorities in France are positive that the outbreak of the virus will be kept under control globally. People usually get infected through contact with infected rodents or their urine, with symptoms varying between Eurasian variants impacting brain and kidney functions, and North and South American variants affecting the pulmonary system. This remains lower than sales during the Covid pandemic however, and Mr Nizard confirmed that France has 'buffer stocks' of masks to deal with any sudden issue.
There were concerns that a mutation of the Andes-strain, making it more deadly or more transmissible, was the cause of the outbreak, and may lead to another Covid-style pandemic. However, "nothing suggests the emergence of a strain that could be more transmissible or more dangerous," said health minister Stéphanie Rist.
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Original reporting
Based on reporting from The Connexion. Read the original source for full details.
Source published May 20, 2:30 AM EDT. Hantavirus Now reviewed reporting from The Connexion and summarized the key points below.
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