Hantavirus in South America: A Physician's Prevention Guide for Travelers (2026)
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PeruConfidence 95%Jun 1, 2026
A physician's guide advises travelers to South America on hantavirus prevention, highlighting endemic regions like Argentine Patagonia, Chile, Bolivia, and Peru, and the importance of avoiding rodent exposure.
Species mentioned
- humans
- rodents
Source articles
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- PrimaryHantavirus in South America: A Physician's Prevention Guide for Travelers (2026)
vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com · 2026-06-01
A physician's guide published on May 6, 2026, advises travelers to South America on hantavirus prevention. It highlights that the Andes virus is endemic in wild rodent populations across southern and western South America, particularly in Argentine Patagonia (Bariloche, El Bolsón, Río Negro, Neuquén provinces) and parts of Chile, Bolivia, and Peru. Prevention relies on avoiding rodent-droppings exposure in rustic, enclosed spaces, as there is no vaccine for the Andes strain.
- ReferenceHantavirus in South America: A Physician's Prevention Guide for Travelers (2026)
travelwithwandr.com · 2026-05-07
An updated physician's guide for 2026 provides essential prevention information for travelers to South America, particularly regions like Patagonia, regarding hantavirus. The guide highlights high-risk areas for Andes hantavirus, which is endemic to wild rodent populations in Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, and parts of Peru. Specific high-risk regions include Argentine Patagonia (Bariloche, El Bolsón, the Lake District, Río Negro, and Neuquén provinces) and Chilean Patagonia (Aysén Region, Torres del Paine National Park, Chiloé Island, and the Carretera Austral corridor). Prevention strategies f
Reminder
This report is an aggregated summary of public information for surveillance and awareness purposes only. It is not medical advice. For symptoms, exposure, or clinical decisions, contact a qualified clinician or your local public-health authority.