Hantavirus Outbreak on Cruise Ship Sparks Urgent Health Measures
A French woman and others from a cruise ship are critically ill in the first recorded hantavirus outbreak aboard such a vessel. The World Health Organization remains cautious about larger spread, while Argentina investigates the origin, suspecting rodent-related exposure. Dutch hospital staff are in quarantine as a precaution.
In a chilling turn of events, a French woman aboard a cruise ship struck by a hantavirus outbreak fights for her life in a Paris hospital. She now relies on an artificial lung to survive, marking a severe form of the disease that has claimed three lives, including a Dutch couple possibly exposed in South America.
The World Health Organization reassures that no larger outbreak has appeared beyond the cruise population. However, WHO's Chief, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, remains cautious due to the virus's extended incubation period and has recommended quarantines for all disembarked passengers.
In Argentina, health experts are headed to trace the outbreak's origins possibly linked to rats. Meanwhile, in the Netherlands, hospital personnel are quarantined for mishandling fluids linked to a positive hantavirus patient, highlighting the virus's seriousness.
(With inputs from agencies.)
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