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90-Second Read: Hantavirus is a reminder we should prepare for the next pandemic

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Malik Thompson

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Published May 11, 2026

Disclaimer
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.

We're going backward instead of forward When I heard about human-to-human transmission of Hantavirus on a cruise ship, I made sure that my household box of emergency supplies was where I thought it was. I checked with knowledgeable medical professionals and none of them seem particularly worried about this particular Hantavirus outbreak, which is great. Not because you should panic about Hantavirus, but because panicking is, by definition, not the correct response to any situation. And that I think about sums up the problem with pandemics. If you're facing an imminent threat, you still shouldn't panic because panicking is never correct.

The implication is that everyone should just continue going about their day without changing anything. For any given novel outbreak, the initial read is almost always going to be that the odds of it becoming a deadly pandemic are low. But we're in a structural situation where, due to population growth, prosperity, and increased connectivity, the odds of new pandemic outbreaks are mechanically rising. I later went online to find the link to the company so I could share it with others, only to discover that it recently went out of business. So by the same token, while it's good to hear that the objective threat level from this outbreak is by most accounts lower than I initially feared, just issuing instructions not to panic doesn't add very much.

That box includes a brand of elastomeric respirator that I saw recommended by a biosecurity expert on a podcast in October. But when I start to see headlines telling people not to panic, I get worried. Separately, technological improvements mean the odds of engineered pandemics are also rising. We ought to be taking aggressive countermeasures to get ahead of these risks, and we largely aren't. And it's definitely the case that the American government has under-reacted.

And it's possible that's correct advice for you and your family. But my sense is that most American households have in fact under-reacted to the threat of novel virus outbreaks (which is perhaps why companies making well-reviewed respirators go out of business).

Source reference

Original reporting

Based on reporting from Slow Boring. Read the original source for full details.

Source published May 11, 6:02 AM EDT. Hantavirus Now reviewed reporting from Slow Boring and summarized the key points below.

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