Casos confirmados
6
ECDC
Actualizado 2026-05-09
Rastreador verificado de salud publica
Panel estilo live tracker para el evento de Andes hantavirus del MV Hondius: resumen, casos, buque, mapa, ventana de exposicion y fuentes oficiales.
Temas de busqueda
Casos confirmados
6
ECDC
Actualizado 2026-05-09
Casos probables
2
ECDC
0 suspected
Muertes
3
ECDC
Actualizado 2026-05-09
Personas monitorizadas
En revision
WHO / ECDC
Sin cifra publica oficial de monitoreo
Ultima actualizacion
2026-05-09
ECDC / WHO
Case categories kept separate
Global public risk
Low / very low
WHO / ECDC
Cruise-ship risk assessed separately
2026-05-09
ECDC's outbreak page lists 6 confirmed cases, 2 probable cases, 0 suspected cases and 3 deaths, and assesses risk to the EU/EEA general population as very low.
2026-05-09
WHO's Tenerife statement says public risk remains low, reports no symptomatic passengers on board at that time, and describes Spain's controlled disembarkation plan.
2026-05-08
WHO DON-600 reports eight cases as of 8 May, including six laboratory-confirmed Andes virus infections and two probable cases, with three deaths.
2026-05-06
ECDC published assessment and response materials for the Andes hantavirus-associated illness cluster linked to the cruise ship.
2026-05-05
The vessel operator published a timeline of the medical situation on board MV Hondius and related response actions.
Contexto por pais solamente; sin seguimiento personal.
Event brief
The current tracker focuses on the MV Hondius Andes hantavirus event, official case categories, response coordination and public-health context. It does not show passenger identities or private health status.
Learn about the outbreakAIS context
Licensed AIS is required for live position. The detail page keeps compliant AIS links and vessel identity.
MMSI
244327000
IMO
9818709
Flag
Netherlands
Trust stack
Confirmed
Case numbers stay tied to ECDC / WHO categories and as-of dates.
Under review
People monitored is not publicly quantified, so the site does not invent a number.
Monitoring
Country markers describe public response context, not individual tracking.
Public risk
General-population risk is low / very low; cruise-ship risk is assessed separately.
Los numeros medicos tienen fuente y pueden cambiar con nuevas actualizaciones oficiales.
Fixed public-health brief
Hantavirus Live treats live as source-update awareness. It does not claim a complete global real-time case total, and it does not turn early signals or headlines into official medical numbers.
What we know
The current MV Hondius snapshot is source-backed: six confirmed cases, two probable cases, zero suspected cases and three deaths as of the latest ECDC / WHO review.
What is not confirmed
There is no official public monitoring count on this site, no personal health tracking and no claim that country markers mean local transmission.
What to do now
Follow local public-health instructions. If compatible symptoms occur after rodent exposure, travel to an affected area or close contact with a confirmed case, seek qualified medical care.
Case categories, timeline and country response context in one structured view.
MMSI, IMO, route context and compliant AIS links for the vessel.
Country-level activity map with source-backed response roles.
Read the latest official event summaries and source changes.
Understand why hantavirus syndromes and regions should not be mixed.
CDC and WHO-style prevention steps for rodent-contaminated spaces.
Tracker reference
The homepage keeps the useful parts of a live incident tracker in one place: concise outbreak status, source lanes, vessel identity, country map, exposure-window explanation and official public-health references.
The current source-backed view lists 6 confirmed cases, 2 probable cases,0 suspected cases and 3 deaths as of 2026-05-09. Counts are not merged into a single headline number because official agencies publish categories and updates on their own cadences.
OUTBREAK
ECDC / WHO
Confirmed, probable, suspected and deaths stay separated so readers can see the official case feed without mixed totals.
COUNTRIES
9 response roles
The map explains country-level response, itinerary and coordination roles; it does not imply local transmission unless a source says so.
AIS
MMSI 244327000
Vessel identity, route context and compliant AIS links are separated from medical data to keep ship tracking and outbreak tracking clear.
MEDICAL
WHO / CDC
Symptoms, incubation, prevention and Andes virus transmission are explained with low-panic public-health wording.
WHO / CDC reference
WHO and CDC describe hantavirus symptom onset as commonly occurring within 1 to 8 weeks after exposure. Contact monitoring depends on the actual exposure history identified by public-health teams.
Full-voyage / on-board cohort
1-8 weeks after exposureRoute exposure context
Use the window as public-health context for why monitoring can continue after travel. It is not a prediction that new cases will occur.
Disembarked passengers
Managed by local authoritiesCountry contact tracing
Earlier disembarkations can create national follow-up work. This site shows country-level roles only, not personal health status.
Close contacts
Close / prolonged contact contextAndes virus caution
Most hantavirus infections are linked to rodent exposure. Andes virus is notable for documented limited person-to-person spread among close contacts.
What happened on MV Hondius?
How many confirmed, probable and fatal cases are source-backed?
Where is the vessel context and AIS identity?
Which countries appear in the response map?
How long can the hantavirus incubation window matter?
Is hantavirus contagious, and what is different about Andes virus?
This structure is inspired by incident-tracker pages, but the medical wording remains conservative: source-backed case categories only, no personal tracking and no unsourced predictions.
Fixed disease reference
A credible Hantavirus Live page should not treat all hantaviruses as one disease. The most important distinction is HPS/HCPS in the Americas versus HFRS in Europe and Asia.
HPS / HCPS
WHO describes HPS/HCPS as a severe lung and heart illness. Andes virus and Sin Nombre virus belong in this framing.
HFRS
WHO describes Europe and Asia hantaviruses as HFRS, affecting the kidneys and blood vessels, with severity varying by virus.
Andes virus
HPS/HCPS
The key exception: limited person-to-person transmission has been documented among close and prolonged contacts.
Handled carefully because it can cause severe cardiopulmonary disease and is the virus named in the MV Hondius event.
Sin Nombre virus
HPS/HCPS
Mainly linked to rodent exposure; routine person-to-person transmission is not the public-health framing.
Important for U.S. awareness because HPS/HCPS can be severe even when cases are uncommon.
Seoul virus
HFRS
Relevant to urban and pet-rat exposure contexts, not only wild rural rodent exposure.
Usually discussed as HFRS; still clinically important when symptoms and exposure history fit.
Puumala virus
HFRS
Associated with rodent exposure in European settings; not treated as a person-to-person virus.
Often described at the milder end of HFRS, but still relevant for European surveillance and seasonality.
Hantaan virus
HFRS
Linked to infected rodent exposure; no broad person-to-person framing in public-health guidance.
Important in East Asian HFRS context and generally discussed at the more severe end of HFRS.
Dobrava-Belgrade virus
HFRS
A European HFRS virus; exposure prevention remains focused on rodents and contaminated environments.
Generally treated as more severe than Puumala-associated disease in public-health summaries.
Symptoms, care and prevention
This section is public-health information, not medical advice. It gives stable context users can read without leaving the homepage and links to detail pages for longer searches.
Fever, headache, muscle aches and gastrointestinal symptoms such as nausea, vomiting or abdominal pain can appear first.
WHO describes symptom onset as usually one to eight weeks after exposure. Monitoring windows depend on public-health assessment.
WHO states there is no licensed specific antiviral treatment or vaccine; care is supportive and severe cases may need ICU-level support.
CDC prevention guidance emphasizes special cleaning steps after rodents: avoid dry sweeping, wet contaminated areas first and disinfect safely.
Background surveillance
Background burden helps readers understand hantavirus globally, but it should not be added to the current cruise-linked case cards. These cards are stable SEO context, not live event data.
Research and national surveillance context
91,388 HFRS cases / 509 deaths, 2014-2023
China is essential background context for a global hantavirus site, but this is long-term HFRS surveillance context, not a live MV Hondius event count.
Annual ECDC epidemiological reporting
1,885 EU/EEA cases reported for 2023
ECDC annual reporting is useful for background burden, seasonality and HFRS context. It should not be mixed into the active cruise-linked case cards.
CDC program pages, weekly and annual tables
CDC surveillance and NNDSS context
U.S. pages should focus on nationally notifiable disease context, CDC public guidance and severe HPS/HCPS awareness rather than a global live total.
Sources and methodology
Hantavirus reporting is fragmented across WHO event reports, ECDC pages, CDC surveillance and national systems. Hantavirus Live organizes sources and keeps every medical number tied to a visible source and as-of date.
Medical disclaimer: this website is informational and not medical advice. It does not provide diagnosis, treatment or individualized clinical guidance.
Official outbreak reports and risk assessments
Official surveillance tables and annual reports
Official clinical and prevention guidance
Operator and AIS context for vessel movement only
Media or signal sources only after review, never as direct case truth
Source change log
This log makes the live tracker auditable. It separates official case changes from source reviews and AIS context, so readers can see why a dashboard card changed without relying on headlines.
2026-05-09 15:30 UTC
China CDC Weekly's 2014-2023 HFRS analysis is used for fixed regional background and is not mixed into the MV Hondius live event count.
2026-05-09 15:30 UTC
ECDC's 2023 annual hantavirus report is used to explain EU/EEA background burden, separate from current cruise-linked case cards.
2026-05-09 15:30 UTC
Diagnosis and treatment copy now links clinical context to CDC/WHO references while staying informational and non-diagnostic.
2026-05-09 14:52 UTC
WHO's 8 May Disease Outbreak News now anchors the WHO case picture: eight total cases, six confirmed, two probable and three deaths.
2026-05-09 14:52 UTC
WHO's 9 May statement keeps public risk low, says there are no symptomatic passengers on board at that time, and describes the controlled Tenerife disembarkation plan.
2026-05-09 14:00 UTC
Homepage case cards use ECDC's May 9 categories, which align with WHO DON-600: confirmed, probable, suspected and deaths remain separate.
2026-05-09 14:00 UTC
Exposure-window copy uses WHO/CDC-style 1 to 8 week symptom-onset language and avoids individual risk scoring.
2026-05-09 13:30 UTC
No licensed AIS API is connected yet, so the site links to compliant AIS providers instead of copying private feeds.
2026-05-04 18:00 UTC
WHO DON-599 remains the historical baseline for the May 4 situation. Current WHO case and risk wording uses DON-600.
ECDC assessed risk to the EU/EEA general population as very low. WHO assessed global risk as low, while separating cruise-ship risk as moderate.
Este sitio es informativo y no sustituye el consejo medico. Siga la orientacion de salud publica local y busque atencion medica si pudo estar expuesto y desarrolla sintomas.
Official public-health sources drive medical data. AIS and operator sources provide vessel context, and signal or media items cannot directly change case counts without review.