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“I hope it’s fine” — President Trump says “we’re in very good shape” on hantavirus

President Donald Trump speaks during a Maternal Healthcare Event in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on May 11, 2026.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

President Donald Trump was asked about the hantavirus during a maternal healthcare event today (May 11) in the Oval Office.

“Now the one thing with this one is that it’s much harder to catch. It’s been around a long time, people are very familiar with it,” Trump said. “So, I hope it’s fine. All I can do is what a president can do, which is actually somewhat limited.”

Genetics of the virus appear very similar to past outbreaks, Spanish health minister says

“The first genetic analyses of the MV Hondius hantavirus confirm that it corresponds to the Andes variant that is already known and rule out relevant mutations,” Spain’s health minister Mónica García wrote in a translated statement on X. “Investigation is helping to reconstruct how transmission occurs and to strengthen epidemiological monitoring.”

Tentatively, these initial results are good news, suggesting the virus is not rapidly evolving new abilities — gaining mutations that could make it more contagious, for instance.

What will happen to the American passengers now that they’re back in the U.S.?

A Nebraska Medicine sign stands in front of a green lawn.

The Davis Global Center at the University of Nebraska Medical Center campus, which holds the National Quarantine Unit, is seen on May 11, 2026 in Omaha, Nebraska.

(Image credit: Dylan Widger/Getty Images)

Good afternoon, everyone. We’re back with more updates regarding the cluster of hantavirus cases associated with the cruise ship MV Hondius.

Following their evacuation onto the Spanish island of Tenerife early Sunday (May 10), the ship’s passengers are being repatriated via chartered flights. Seventeen American citizens and one British national have been transported to the U.S.

WHO update on May 9 — repatriation flights planned Sunday and Monday

WHO update on May 9 — still eight cases

WHO Director-General to people of Tenerife

World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus at the WHO headquarters in Geneva.

(Image credit: FABRICE COFFRINI/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

On May 9, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the director-general of the World Health Organization (WHO), shared a message with the residents of the Spanish island of Tenerife, where MV Hondius is anticipated to make port Sunday (May 10).

“It is not common for me to write directly to the people of a single community, but today I feel it is not only appropriate, it is necessary,” he wrote. “I want to speak to you directly, not through press releases or technical briefings, but as one human being to another, because you deserve that.”

Weekend updates

Live Science is signing off for the weekend, but our reporters and editors will continue to track the outbreak as it evolves. If anything major changes, we’ll pop on here to let you know — but barring that, we’ll be back to blogging at a regular clip on Monday (May 11).

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Nicoletta Lanese

Spain finds South African exposed to woman who died of hantavirus

In a translated X post, Spain’s health minister, Mónica García, announced, “We confirmed that the second person who traveled on the plane at the same time as the Dutch woman from the MV Hondius cruise ship, who later died from hantavirus in Johannesburg, has been located.”

According to García, the South African woman is currently asymptomatic in South Africa, after having stayed a week in Barcelona.

CDC will escort Americans on MV Hondius to quarantine in Nebraska

There is no vaccine for hantavirus, but research is promising

Scientists at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases have been working on hantavirus vaccines since the 1980s, virologist Jay Hooper told Nature News. Hooper’s team has already completed Phase I clinical trials of a vaccine that protects against the Andes virus ‪—‬ the only hantavirus type that has been shown to spread between humans ‪—‬ that has been linked to the MV Hondius cluster. But the team has not identified a region with enough cases to run the full clinical trial that would allow them to meet licensing requirements for a vaccine.

US citizens on board will receive repatriation flight

“The Department of State is ​closely tracking the hantavirus outbreak on ​a Dutch cruise ship in the Atlantic Ocean and maintaining close contact with ​the cruise ship staff, Americans ​on board, and U.S. and international health ‌authorities,” the spokesperson said in a statement.

Hantavirus evacuation has a short time window due to weather conditions

Is hantavirus on the rise?

Where did the cruise stop?

An aerial photo of a white cruise ship in the middle of a blue ocean.

An aerial view of the MV Hondius.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Since leaving Ushuaia, Argentina, April 1, MV Hondius has visited numerous islands.

The ship first visited South Georgia and Tristan da Cunha, before sailing on to St. Helena. They stopped at St. Helena April 24, with this being the final destination for some passengers on board.

All passengers left on MV Hondius currently without symptoms, WHO says

2 Singapore residents test negative for hantavirus

Woman self-isolating in Alicante

A woman is self-isolating in the Spanish city of Alicante after traveling on a flight “close to” a woman who died with a hantavirus infection, Spain’s health minister, Mónica García, wrote in a translated statement on X.

The woman “has reported mild symptoms compatible [with the disease] and is being preventively isolated while the National Microbiology Center analyzes the diagnostic samples that will be taken from her,” García wrote.

“We shouldn’t be alarmist; we should be realistic,” hantavirus expert says

This is what Gustavo Palacios, a hantavirus expert and professor of microbiology at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York who documented a previous outbreak of the disease, told El País in a story published today.

Palacios led a study of the November 2018 to February 2019 Andes virus outbreak in the village of Epuyén, in Argentina’s Chubut province. There were 34 confirmed cases and 11 deaths during that outbreak, with human-to-human transmission occurring during a “superspreader” birthday party that resulted in four generations of infections.

British authorities identify new suspected case

A view of an island from the ocean.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

U.K. authorities have identified a new suspected case of hantavirus on the South Atlantic island of Tristan da Cunha, according to a May 8 statement by the U.K. Health Security Agency.

The individual, a British man, likely disembarked from the MV Hondius when it made a stop there on April 15. He is currently in the hospital while his spouse is isolating, U.K. officials said. The island’s population is a little over 200 people.

Ben Turner

Ben Turner

What will happen when the ship arrives in Spain?

Where is the cruise ship now?

Ben Turner

Ben Turner

U.S.’ slow hantavirus response offers a troubling glimpse into future pandemic preparedness, experts say

“We should be able to deal collectively with a hantavirus outbreak much more quickly and effectively than this is happening,” Stephanie Psaki, a public health expert at Brown University and former coordinator for global health security in the Biden administration, told the NYT. “It can get much harder than this.”

“It’s very much, we hope, under control”: U.S. sets lowest emergency level response to the virus

Donald Trump pointing as Homeland Security Markwayne Mullin stands to his left.

President Donald Trump spoke to reporters about the Andes virus cluster as he inspected the painting of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool basin with Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin.

(Image credit: Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Those were the words of President Donald Trump when asked if he’d been briefed on the virus.

“I think we’re going to make a full report about it tomorrow,” he continued. “We have a lot of people — a lot of great people are studying it. It should be fine, we hope.”

Dutch flight attendant tests negative for hantavirus infection

Other cruise passengers in the U.S.

An aerial view of a white and black cruise ship taken from the front left, with the name of the ship seen below as it sits in the ocean with a coastline behind it.

An aerial view of the cruise ship MV Hondius stationary off the port of Praia, the capital of Cape Verde, on May 5, 2026.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

In addition to the person in Arizona who recently returned from a cruise on the MV Hondius, several people in Georgia and California are facing the same situation.

On May 7, the Georgia Department of Public Health told Live Science via email that it is “monitoring two Georgia residents who returned home after disembarking from the MV Hondius, the cruise ship at the center of a hantavirus outbreak. The individuals are currently in good health and show no signs of infection. They are following current recommendations from CDC.”

Arizona Department of Health Services gives a hantavirus update

As always: Vet your sources

With that in mind, be wary of bad actors, particularly on social media, who take advantage of uncertainty to sow doubt or stir up conspiracies. I understand the impulse to seek out more information and to pose questions when something is unclear or underexplained — but that is distinct from spreading misinformation and disinformation.

Trump admin axed Andes virus research

Airline crewmember being tested for hantavirus

The infected person — the woman whose husband was the first to die on board — had felt ill when she disembarked on the island of St. Helena. Her condition worsened during a flight from St. Helena to Johannesburg, South Africa. She then attempted to board a flight from Johannesburg to Amsterdam, but “due to the passenger’s health condition at the time, the crew decided not to allow the passenger to board the flight,” KLM has said.

Catching a killer — how to trace a rare and deadly virus

This image reveals some of the histopathologic details seen in a lymph node specimen that had been extracted from a patient suspected of a hantavirus illness.

(Image credit: CDC)

Andes virus outbreaks are rare, with only a handful documented since the 1990s. This makes investigations into clusters of cases like those associated with the MV Hondius tricky. However, one outbreak that hit southern Argentina’s village of Epuyen in 2018 may prove to be informative.

The Epuyen outbreak infected 34 people and led to 11 deaths due to hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, in which a hantavirus attacks the lungs.

Clarity on cruise itinerary

An aerial photo of a white cruise ship in the middle of a blue ocean.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Various social media posts and videos have been casting suspicion on when the MV Hondius actually departed Ushuaia, Argentina. The WHO’s website notes April 1 as the departure date, while the Africa CDC website states March 20. So I reached out to the cruise operator, Oceanwide Expeditions, about the discrepancy.

A spokesperson shared that, from March 20 to March 30, the ship traveled from Ushuaia to Antarctica and back. Then, from April 1 to April 24, it traveled from Ushuaia to the island of St. Helena. Then, between April 24 and May 4, it traveled from St. Helena to Cape Verde.

Viral videos of distressed passengers

Deceased passenger remains on board

The body of the third person to die in the outbreak — a woman who passed away on board May 2 after developing pneumonia — is still being stored on the MV Hondius. WHO officials are in contact with the cruise operators about safe storage and eventual transport of the remains.

Genetic sequencing underway

As of yet, there’s “no indication” that there’s anything particularly unusual about the hantaviruses themselves, but it is notable that the outbreak is taking place on a cruise ship, said Anaïs Legand, the WHO’s technical officer of viral hemorrhagic fevers. A ship is a unique environment where people from many places are in close quarters.

The WHO recommends that contacts be monitored for six weeks, as the incubation period ‪—‬ the time between when someone is exposed to the virus and when symptoms begin —‬ of hantavirus infections can be that long. Known cases that are symptomatic are being isolated and cared for in hospitals.

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Nicoletta Lanese

Where did the infection come from?

“Viruses don’t care about politics”

World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus at the WHO headquarters in Geneva.

(Image credit: FABRICE COFFRINI/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

Both Argentina and the U.S. recently withdrew from the World Health Organization (WHO). In the face of this outbreak, “I think they will reconsider their positions,” said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the WHO’s director-general. “Viruses don’t care about our politics, they don’t care about our borders, and they don’t care about all the excuses that we may have.”

When asked whether U.S. health authorities are participating in the ongoing investigation, several WHO representatives confirmed that the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is providing helpful technical support and expertise and communicating with WHO leaders daily.

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Nicoletta Lanese

World Health Organization says risk to the public is “low”

Maria Van Kerkhove looks on during a press conference at the World Health Organization's headquarters in Geneva

Maria Van Kerkhove at a WHO news conference.

(Image credit: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images)

The World Health Organization (WHO) just held a news conference to discuss the hantavirus cases.

The WHO has been working with collaborating centers to identify the type of virus behind the outbreak, as well as investigate suspected and confirmed cases and perform contact tracing. The agency has also been quick to quash fears that the outbreak could spark a global pandemic.

What is hantavirus, and how risky is this outbreak?

An illustration of a blue translucent spiky sphere of a hantavirus molecule, with a 3D strand of DNA at the center. All in front of a blue background.

(Image credit: ROGER HARRIS/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY via Getty Images)

Hantaviruses are a family of viruses carried by rodents. Hantavirus infections in humans are relatively uncommon, but when they do occur, they can be dangerous, with fatality rates ranging between 1% and 50% depending on the type of hantavirus. No specific treatment exists to cure infections, but prompt medical care can improve patients’ chances of survival.

While most hantaviruses cannot pass between people, one specific type, known as the Andes virus, can. The Andes virus is the type of hantavirus that laboratory tests point to being behind this cluster. Health authorities are now working to analyze the virus’s DNA to compare its sequence to that of Andes viruses involved in past outbreaks.

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