Hantavirus Cruiseship Outbreak 2026: The impact of the Hantavirus outbreak on Canada

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Hantavirus Cruiseship Outbreak 2026: The impact of the Hantavirus outbreak on Canada

A deadly hantavirus outbreak aboard the Dutch expedition cruise ship MV Hondius has killed three passengers and infected at least five others, prompting an unprecedented multinational evacuation operation as the vessel approaches Tenerife in Spain’s Canary Islands. The outbreak caused by the South American Andes virus (ANDV), the only hantavirus strain known to spread between people. While the World Health Organization and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention both stress the risk to the general public is low, the incident is the first hantavirus outbreak ever recorded on a cruise ship and a stark reminder that a pathogen long associated with dusty cabins and grain sheds can travel as easily as its passengers.

Image: The MV Hondius ship Source: MV Hondius Wikipedia

The MV Hondius, a 196-passenger Dutch-flagged expedition vessel operated by Oceanwide Expeditions, departed Ushuaia, Argentina on April 1, 2026 for an Antarctic and South Atlantic voyage that was scheduled to end in the Canary Islands. By April 6, a 70-year-old Dutch passenger had developed fever, headache and diarrhea. He died on April 11 and was initially recorded as a natural-causes death with no microbiological testing performed by the ship’s single physician.

Created by Guard More Pest Control from Toronto Ontario

After the ship called at Saint Helena on April 24, roughly 30 passengers disembarked including the deceased man’s symptomatic 69-year-old widow. She boarded a KLM flight from Johannesburg the next day, deteriorated en route, and died on April 26. A British passenger medically evacuated from Ascension Island the following day was the first to receive a definitive diagnosis: PCR testing at South Africa’s National Institute for Communicable Diseases confirmed hantavirus on May 2, 2026, the same day a German passenger died on board. The WHO confirmed the strain as Andes virus on May 6 with sequencing data from a Swiss patient publicly posted the next day.

As of May 8, the WHO tally stood at eight cases (six laboratory-confirmed and two suspected) with three deaths. Confirmed infections include the Dutch woman, two British passengers hospitalized in Johannesburg, a Swiss man treated at University Hospital Zurich, a Dutch crew member at Radboud University Medical Center, and additional evacuees in the Netherlands. Roughly 146 people remained on the ship confirmed non-symptomatic.

The cause was pre-cruise exposure from bird-watching trip near rodents not a shipboard rodent infestation

A widespread early assumption is that rodents had infested the vessel and this assumption has been explicitly contradicted by official investigations. Argentine and WHO investigators believe the Dutch couple contracted Andes virus during a four-month overland trip through Chile, Uruguay and Argentina before boarding, with a bird-watching excursion near Ushuaia (possibly including a landfill known to harbour the rat reservoir) as the leading hypothesis. WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus confirmed at a May 7 briefing that the couple “travelled through Argentina, Chile and Uruguay on a bird-watching trip which included visits to sites where the species of rat known to carry the virus was present.

Subsequent shipboard cases are believed to reflect the rare human-to-human transmission that distinguishes Andes virus from every other known hantavirus. It was documented in the 2018–2019 Epuyén, Argentina cluster, which infected 34 people and killed 11. Argentine authorities have since launched rodent trapping in Ushuaia and 2,500 diagnostic tests across the country.

A 22-country evacuation and a cautious public health message

The response has been extraordinary. Spain’s Canary Islands president Fernando Clavijo initially refused to let the ship dock, saying he “cannot allow [Hondius] to enter the Canaries” but the central Spanish health ministry overruled him by designating the Port of Granadilla in Tenerife as the safest anchorage. The vessel was scheduled to anchor offshore on May 10 with passengers ferried by small boats and bused in sealed transports directly to the airport for staged evacuations coordinated across 23 countries and assisted by the EU Civil Protection Mechanism. The CDC issued Health Alert Network advisory HAN00528 on May 8 and is repatriating American passengers to the National Quarantine Center at the University of Nebraska Medical Center via Offutt Air Force Base. Though officials have explicitly said they will not impose mandatory quarantine and are opting for the 42-day voluntary symptom monitoring instead.

WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros, who travelled to Tenerife personally, addressed local residents directly: This is not another COVID-19. The current public health risk from hantavirus remains low“. WHO’s acting director for epidemic preparedness Maria Van Kerkhove was equally blunt: “This is not COVID, this is not influenza; it spreads very, very differently“.

Number of Hantavirus Cases in Canada

Hantavirus disease is uncommon in Canada but consistently fatal. According to the Public Health Agency of Canada, the National Microbiology Laboratory has confirmed 168 cases of hantavirus infection in Canada since active surveillance began in 1994 (figure current as of May 1, 2026). Canada averages roughly five to ten human cases per year and almost all caused by Sin Nombre virus and concentrated in the Prairie provinces.

The Government of Saskatchewan reported 38 HPS cases between 1994 and 2024 of which 12 resulted in death. The BC Centre for Disease Control reported a 2023 provincial Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (DPS) fatality rate of about 44.4% per cent. Nationally, the Canadian case-fatality rate is estimated near 25% with women experiencing somewhat worse outcomes than men. Notably, PHAC’s main surveillance webpage still displays cumulative figures from January 2015 (109 cases, 27 deaths), a discrepancy worth flagging for any reader cross-checking the data. The 168-case figure on PHAC’s “Risks of a hantavirus infection” page is the current authoritative number. Underreporting is also widely acknowledged because early HPS symptoms mimic seasonal flu.

Six Canadians are currently isolating after possible Hondius exposure with three from Ontario, one in Quebec, and two in Alberta linked to a passenger’s return flight. There are still four more Canadians still aboard the ship. None have shown symptoms and could not be tested because “there is no validated test for asymptomatic individuals“ quoting Dr. Joss Reimer, Canada’s Chief Public Health Officer. PHAC’s rapid risk assessment classifies the importation likelihood for Andes virus as moderate but the risk of onward spread in Canada as minor because the primary rodent virus carrier, long-tailed pygmy rice rat (Oligoryzomys longicaudatus), does not live in Canada.

On May 14 2026, Canada’s chief public health officer Dr. Joss Reimer said during a news conference that local public health units are contacting 26 people who were on the same planes with the Hantavirus cases. These 26 additional individuals are considered “low-risk” because there is no evidence that these individuals sat near or had prolonged contact with Hantavirus positive individuals.

On May 17 2026, PHAC has confirmed through lab testing that the first positive Hantavirus case from the cruise ship is from British Columbia.

Currently the Ontario individuals are being monitored and currently self-isolating.

Grey County Region (Grey-Bruce): 2 isolated and monitoring for the 45 day period.

Peel Region: 1 isolated and monitoring for the 45 day period.

For more information about Hantavirus and impact on humans, check out the original source at Guard More Pest Control's Hantavirus resource and FAQ