90-Second Read: Hantavirus Shrinks the Lines Between Human and Animal Health
Editorial voice
Maya Okafor
Published
Published May 25, 2026
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This Hantavirus outbreak is a smaller, slower-moving version of the same lesson: the line between human health, animal health and the places we travel for pleasure is much smaller than we like to think. Though much of the focus has been to reassure people that this is not the next COVID-19, what this outbreak points to is a real-time One Health story, a framework that recognizes human, animal and environmental health as a single, interconnected system. But what connects these stories is a world where the boundaries between human health, animal health, climate and travel are largely fictional, and shrinking further every year. Fourteen months later, 11 people on the Dutch cruise ship Hondius have been infected with a different Hantavirus strain.
Andes virus, found in South America, is the only Hantavirus known to spread between people, and through close, interpersonal contact. A New England Journal of Medicine study of a 2018 Andes outbreak reconstructed how a single zoonotic spillover from a rodent reservoir in Argentina produced 34 human cases and 11 deaths over three months, driven by three symptomatic super-spreaders at crowded social events. Deer mouse populations in North America boomed roughly tenfold following the wet, warm El Niño winter of 1991 to 1992, triggering the 1993 Hantavirus outbreak. When humans push into ecosystems they don't normally inhabit, they are exposed to viruses.
The pathogen that killed her was Hantavirus, almost certainly picked up from deer mouse droppings on the property. Hantaviruses are not one virus but a family of related viruses, carried by different rodent species in different parts of the world. Hantavirus was not identified until May 2, three weeks during which the ship continued its route, calling at multiple ports. The World Health Organization's own 2016 handbook for managing public health events on board ships calls for an "all-hazards" precautionary approach when a cause cannot be identified.
The same dynamic plays out elsewhere: in Southeast Asia for example, rodent trade networks, deforestation and intensifying agriculture continually create new interfaces between people and pathogens. Old pathogens now have more opportunities to expand and interact with humankind. Last-chance tourism into fragile and isolated ecosystems, wildlife photography in remote habitats, cruises that promise experiences into uninhabited shores: this is a growing category of travel despite being potential One Health exposures.
Source reference
Original reporting
Based on reporting from The Tyee. Read the original source for full details.
Source published May 21, 11:50 PM EDT. Hantavirus Now reviewed reporting from The Tyee and summarized the key points below.
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