Updated
Updated · Hawaii News Now · May 15
Expert Says 3 Cruise Ship Hantavirus Deaths Do Not Signal Next Pandemic
Updated
Updated · Hawaii News Now · May 15

Expert Says 3 Cruise Ship Hantavirus Deaths Do Not Signal Next Pandemic

2 articles · Updated · Hawaii News Now · May 15
  • Three fatalities tied to a cruise ship hantavirus outbreak have stirred concern, but infectious-disease specialist Dr. Scott Miscovich said the virus is not poised to become the next pandemic.
  • Miscovich said hantavirus spreads far less easily than COVID-19, usually originates from infected rodents, and mutates less often, limiting the emergence of fast-spreading variants.
  • He cited low case counts to support that view: about 893 cases across the Americas over roughly 15 years and 2,500 to 3,000 cases annually in Europe.
  • Hawaii residents interviewed said they were mostly watching the numbers rather than panicking, though some said memories of COVID lockdowns still shape how they react to new virus headlines.
  • The comments frame the cruise ship deaths as a serious but contained outbreak, with public-health lessons from COVID now informing a more measured response.
After a deadly hantavirus outbreak at sea, can the cruise industry prevent the next rare disease spillover?
Hantavirus is notoriously difficult to catch. How did it cause a deadly outbreak on a single cruise ship?