Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jul 9
NPS Probes Illness Cluster in 2 Grand Canyon Rafting Trips as 4 of 16 Boaters Fell Sick
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jul 9

NPS Probes Illness Cluster in 2 Grand Canyon Rafting Trips as 4 of 16 Boaters Fell Sick

3 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jul 9

Summary

  • Multiple Grand Canyon rafters from separate two-week trips since mid-May reported severe unexplained illnesses, prompting the National Park Service to open an investigation.
  • Four of 16 people on a mid-June trip later fell ill, according to a Facebook group post, with reported symptoms including fever, chills, fatigue, pneumonia, fluid in the lungs and one brief loss of consciousness.
  • A second rafter said he went to the emergency room after a mid-May trip with a swollen knee and "bone-crushing" joint pain, while posters from both trips said they had mosquito bites in the canyon.
  • Online speculation has centered on mosquito-borne viruses such as dengue or chikungunya, though no cause has been confirmed and officials have not publicly commented.
  • The inquiry comes as U.S. health officials are already tracking summer increases in a microscopic parasite that can cause prolonged gastrointestinal illness, underscoring broader seasonal disease concerns.

Insights

Is a tropical virus now spreading among visitors in the Grand Canyon?
Beyond extreme heat, what new invisible danger is sickening Grand Canyon rafters?