TRENDING
‘I lost my children because…’ — Actor Roy De Nani cries for help • Police arraign father, four others over rape, sexual offences in Anambra • 2026 BECE: Malpractice culprits will be dealt with ruthlessly — Education Ministry • Inside the Room Where Lagos Bartenders Met Jack Daniel’s • NNL: Ranchers Bees keen to bounce back from Super Four opening day loss • Strait of Hormuz: Pakistan thanks Trump for pausing ‘Project Freedom’ • 2027: Wike refuses to confirm or deny Chinda’s governorship bid • FG bans ‘Dr’ prefix for honorary degree holders • Drama in senate as Oshiomhole, Akpabio clash over amended rules • Wike challenges PDP rivals to open party bank account, secretariat • Two Nigerians arrested in Uganda for drug trafficking, fraud • US tourist accuses scuba instructor of inappropriate conduct during Dive in Egypt • PRESED intensifies public education on air pollution • Musk To Spend $55bn On SpaceX AI Chip Project In Texas • What Nigerian organisations get wrong about their workforce, By Babafemi Aina • Enugu disowns illegal levy on traditional medicine practitioners • Otti approves feasibility study for proposed Azumini-Obeaku Seaport Corridor project • The N3.4 trillion question: Why e-invoicing is bigger than compliance • ‘We want rewards for cost discipline in Nigeria, not handouts’- ExxonMobil Nigeria’s chief • Wike orders cleanup of Jabi Lake shanties, insists on master plans compliance • ‘I lost my children because…’ — Actor Roy De Nani cries for help • Police arraign father, four others over rape, sexual offences in Anambra • 2026 BECE: Malpractice culprits will be dealt with ruthlessly — Education Ministry • Inside the Room Where Lagos Bartenders Met Jack Daniel’s • NNL: Ranchers Bees keen to bounce back from Super Four opening day loss • Strait of Hormuz: Pakistan thanks Trump for pausing ‘Project Freedom’ • 2027: Wike refuses to confirm or deny Chinda’s governorship bid • FG bans ‘Dr’ prefix for honorary degree holders • Drama in senate as Oshiomhole, Akpabio clash over amended rules • Wike challenges PDP rivals to open party bank account, secretariat • Two Nigerians arrested in Uganda for drug trafficking, fraud • US tourist accuses scuba instructor of inappropriate conduct during Dive in Egypt • PRESED intensifies public education on air pollution • Musk To Spend $55bn On SpaceX AI Chip Project In Texas • What Nigerian organisations get wrong about their workforce, By Babafemi Aina • Enugu disowns illegal levy on traditional medicine practitioners • Otti approves feasibility study for proposed Azumini-Obeaku Seaport Corridor project • The N3.4 trillion question: Why e-invoicing is bigger than compliance • ‘We want rewards for cost discipline in Nigeria, not handouts’- ExxonMobil Nigeria’s chief • Wike orders cleanup of Jabi Lake shanties, insists on master plans compliance
Three suspected hantavirus cases evacuated from cruise ship – WHO
Back to Home

Three suspected hantavirus cases evacuated from cruise ship – WHO

Vanguard Nigeria about 1 hour 2 mins read
Three suspected hantavirus cases evacuated from cruise ship – WHO

Three people believed to have been infected with hantavirus have been evacuated from a cruise ship off Cape Verde and are being taken to the Netherlands, the WHO chief said Wednesday.

World Health Organization director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that “the overall public health risk remains low” from the alert over the rare disease usually spread from infected rodents, typically through urine, droppings and saliva

“Three suspected hantavirus case patients have just been evacuated from the ship and are on their way to receive medical care in the Netherlands,” Tedros said on X.

The MV Hondius cruise ship has been at the centre of an international alert since Saturday, when the WHO was informed that three passengers had died and the suspected cause was hantavirus.

The Dutch-flagged ship set sail from Ushuaia in Argentina on April 1 on a voyage through the Atlantic Ocean and has been anchored off Cape Verde since Sunday.

It counted 88 passengers and 59 crew members, with 23 nationalities onboard, the WHO said.

To date, three hantavirus cases have been confirmed, including one of the fatalities, and five others are suspected.

Wednesday’s evacuation — of two crew members and one other person believed to have contracted the virus — took place in coordination with the WHO, the ship’s Dutch operator Oceanwide Expeditions and national authorities from Cape Verde, Britain and the Netherlands, Tedros said.

“WHO continues to work with the ship’s operators to closely monitor the health of passengers and crew, working with countries to support appropriate medical follow-up and evacuation where needed,” he said.

“Monitoring and follow-up for passengers on board and for those who have already disembarked has been initiated in collaboration with the ship’s operators and national health authorities,” he added.

“At this stage, the overall public health risk remains low,” he said.

AFP

The post Three suspected hantavirus cases evacuated from cruise ship – WHO appeared first on Vanguard News.

This article was sourced from an external publication.

Share this article

Comments (0)

Want to join the discussion?

Sign in to post comments and engage with the community.

Be the first to comment!