90-Second Read: Hantavirus cases nearly doubled in Argentina in the past year. Experts say climate change is to blame
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Lucas Ferreira
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Published May 9, 2026

Hantavirus cases in Argentina have almost doubled in the past year, with the country recording 32 deaths alongside its highest number of infections since 2018. Experts blame climate change and habitat destruction for the rise in cases of the disease, which is usually caused by exposure to the urine or feces of infected rodents. The current season, which started in June 2025, has already seen 101 confirmed Hantavirus cases, Argentina's health ministry said – compared with just 57 during the same period last season. While no cases of the Hantavirus have been recorded in Ushuaia in recent decades, according to the ministry, the virus is endemic in some other areas of Argentina. For many years, Hantavirus had been associated with Patagonia in Argentina's southern tip, after a deadly outbreak in.
The outbreak on the ship has been linked to the Andes strain of Hantavirus, a rare but potentially severe form of the virus that in some cases can spread between humans through close contact. Increasing human interaction with wild environments, habitat destruction, the establishment of small urbanizations in rural areas, and the effects of climate change contribute to the appearance of cases outside historically endemic areas. These rodents are better able to adapt to climate changes, which could facilitate the higher number of cases we are seeing," explained Eduardo López, an infectious disease specialist and adviser to the Argentine government during the Covid-19 pandemic. The rise comes as Argentina races to trace the footsteps of a couple who traveled extensively in the country and later died amid an outbreak on.
Four geographic regions of Argentina are historically high-risk areas for contagion: Northwest (in the provinces of Salta, Jujuy, and Tucumán), Northeast (Misiones, Formosa, and Chaco), Center (Buenos Aires, Santa Fe, and Entre Ríos), and South (Neuquén, Río Negro, and Chubut). Hantavirus in Argentina usually develops in rural and peri-urban areas, in the presence of crops, tall weeds, humidity, or a subtropical climate. But experts believe environmental degradation caused by climate change and human activity is contributing to its spread by allowing the rodents that transmit the virus to thrive in new areas. Temperature rises generate changes in the ecosystem that affect the presence of the long-tailed mouse, the main carrier of the virus in Argentina and Chile. And those numbers exclude the outbreak on the cruise-ship MV Hondius, the origins.
This season, however, most cases have been found in the country's central region, with the province of Buenos Aires topping the highest number of cases with 42. Extreme weather phenomena, such as droughts and episodes of intense rainfall in recent years, are also fueling the trend, according to experts. Argentine authorities believe the couple visited various regions of the country as they crossed back and forth over the border with neighboring Chile on several occasions, and into Uruguay, before joining the cruise. The Health Ministry said technical health teams will travel to Ushuaia in Argentina's Tierra del Fuego province to capture and analyze rodents in areas linked to the route of the Dutch couple believed to have been exposed to the virus. The National Ministry of Health hasn't been able.
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Based on reporting from CNN. Read the original source for full details.
Source published May 9, 12:00 AM EDT. Hantavirus Now reviewed reporting from CNN and summarized the key points below.
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