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  3. /Race to trace passengers who left hantavirus cruise ship at island
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Race to trace passengers who left hantavirus cruise ship at island

BBC News1h ago4 min readOriginal source →
Race to trace passengers who left hantavirus cruise ship at island

TL;DR

Passengers from a hantavirus-affected cruise ship disembarked on St Helena, including a woman who later died. Health authorities are tracing these passengers as one has been diagnosed with hantavirus.

Key points

  • Passengers disembarked from a hantavirus-hit cruise ship
  • A woman who left the ship later died in South Africa
  • Health authorities are tracing passengers from the MV Hondius
  • A Swiss national diagnosed with hantavirus was among those who disembarked
  • Two other people died on board the vessel

Mentioned in this story

St HelenaOceanwide ExpeditionsSwiss national69-year-old woman
MV Hondius

Why it matters

The situation highlights the urgent need for health monitoring and response to potential outbreaks following exposure to hantavirus.

Dozens of people who had been on board a hantavirus-hit cruise ship disembarked on the island of St Helena in the South Atlantic, including a woman who later died, the Dutch government and the ship's operator have said.

Oceanwide Expeditions said 29 passengers, of at least 12 different nationalities, left the MV Hondius on 24 April. The Dutch government gave a different figure of 40.

Health authorities are now trying to trace the passengers who left the ship on the British Overseas Territory.

The Dutch government said a Swiss national who has since been diagnosed with hantavirus was one of those who left the cruise at St Helena. A 69-year-old woman who later died in South Africa also disembarked the ship there.

Two other people died on board the Dutch vessel, which set sail from Argentina a month ago.

Three others were evacuated from the ship on Wednesday, of British, Dutch and German nationalities.

The Brit has been named as 56-year-old Martin Anstee and is in a stable condition. The other evacuees were a 41-year-old Dutch crew member and a 65-year-old German, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

Oceanwide Expeditions said in an update on Thursday that 30 people, including the body of one of the guests who later died, had disembarked on 24 April.

This included seven British people and six Americans, as well as guests from countries including Canada, Germany, Singapore, Turkey and Switzerland.

It added that the first confirmed case of hantavirus was not reported until 4 May and thatall guests who disembarked the ship have been contacted by it.

Oceanwide Expeditions also said it remained in "close and continual discussion with relevant authorities regarding our exact point of arrival, quarantine and screening procedures for all guests".

The Dutch luxury cruise liner is set to dock in Spain's Canary Islands in the coming days.

The WHO has said eight cases of hantavirus - three confirmed and five suspected - have so far been identified in people who were on board.

Officials have said that one of the deceased had the virus, while the other two deaths are under investigation.

The Dutch government said the ship stopped at St Helena on its way to Cape Verde, an archipelago nation off the West African coast.

Among those who disembarked was a 69-year-old Dutch woman who left the cruise at St Helena on 24 April, and travelled to South Africa, where she died two days later. Her husband died on board the cruise on 11 April, but is not a confirmed case of hantavirus.

The Dutch government update said before her death she had boarded a KLM flight heading from Johannesburg to the Netherlands, but became ill before its departure.

It said the Netherlands National Institute for Public Health and the Environment would send letters to passengers who were on the flight, asking them to remain "available for monitoring".

The third fatality - a German woman - is not a confirmed case either. Her body remains on the ship.

Separately, Dutch media reported on Thursday that a KLM flight attendant had been admitted to hospital in Amsterdam with hantavirus symptoms.

Meanwhile Singapore's Communicable Diseases Agency said it was isolating and testing two men - a 67-year-old Singaporean and a 65-year-old permanent resident - who disembarked the ship in St Helena.

It added that they had taken the same flight from St Helena to Johannesburg in South Africa as the 69-year-old woman who died. Their hantavirus test results are still pending.

Two US states - Georgia and Arizona - confirmed to the BBC that they are monitoring three passengers who returned to the US after disembarking. None were displaying symptoms. The US Department of State said it was in "direct contact" with affected passengers.

St Helena is one of the remotest islands on Earth, at 47sq miles - a third of the size of the Isle of Wight - with a population of about 4,400 and one hospital.

Argentina's health ministry has said officials will test rodents in the city of Ushuaia, where the ship set sail from on 1 April.

Q&A

What is hantavirus and how is it transmitted?

Hantavirus is a viral infection transmitted primarily through contact with rodent droppings, urine, or saliva, and can cause severe respiratory issues.

How many passengers left the hantavirus cruise ship at St Helena?

Reports indicate that either 29 or 40 passengers disembarked the MV Hondius at St Helena, with at least 12 different nationalities represented.

What happened to the passengers who left the cruise ship?

Health authorities are tracing the passengers, as one Swiss national has been diagnosed with hantavirus and a 69-year-old woman who disembarked later died in South Africa.

What actions are being taken by health authorities regarding the cruise ship passengers?

Health authorities are actively tracing the passengers who left the ship to monitor for potential hantavirus infections and to provide necessary medical support.

People also ask

  • what is hantavirus
  • hantavirus cruise ship passengers traced
  • how many passengers left hantavirus ship
  • hantavirus symptoms and transmission
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At a glance

  • Passengers disembarked from a hantavirus-hit cruise ship
  • A woman who left the ship later died in South Africa
  • Health authorities are tracing passengers from the MV Hondius
  • A Swiss national diagnosed with hantavirus was among those who disembarked
  • Two other people died on board the vessel

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