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The CDC has stated that the risk of a widespread hantavirus outbreak remains low, despite recent cases aboard the MV Hondius cruise ship. Officials reassured the public, emphasizing their experience with the Andes strain of the virus.
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Members of the press report from an expected reception point for passengers from the MV Hondius at the Granadilla Port on May 09, 2026 in Tenerife, part of the Canary Islands, Spain. Chris McGrath/Getty Images
Chris McGrath/Getty Images
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Saturday said the agency had deep experience with the Andes strain of the hantavirus, offering assurance to the American public that there was low risk for a widespread outbreak.
The remarks from CDC officials come as headlines about the virus — which broke out aboard a cruise ship last month — have sparked fears of a COVID-like pandemic.
Officials speaking to reporters on Saturday stressed that transmission of the virus from person to person was rare and the risk to the American public remains "extremely low."
The CDC has assessed the risk of a widespread hantavirus outbreak as low.
Three passengers died from hantavirus and eight more cases were reported aboard the MV Hondius cruise ship last month.
The World Health Organization stated that the hantavirus outbreak does not constitute a pandemic, despite causing anxiety in affected regions.

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Hantavirus is typically contracted when humans come into contact with rodent urine, saliva or feces.
The Andes strain of the virus, however — which is the one currently being monitored aboard the MV Honius cruise ship — can, in rare instances, transmit person to person.
Three people from the cruise — a Dutch couple and a German woman — have died from the virus.
The Dutch couple is thought to have come into contact with hantavirus before boarding the ship, during a birdwatching excursion at an Argentine landfill site.
More than two dozen American passengers were aboard the ship. Seven have already returned to the United States, but 17 more remain onboard, as it approaches the Spanish Canary Islands off the west coast of Africa.
Officials said that the seven passengers who are back stateside have been monitored while at their homes and have at no point exhibited any symptoms related to the virus.
The remaining 17 will eventually be brought back into the country and stationed inside the National Quarantine Unit at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, where they will also be monitored.
The CDC officials stressed that the group's time at the unit would not constitute a quarantine, as has been previously reported by CNN.