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AdvisoryPublished Jun 3 · 2026AI-classified · awaiting human verification

CDC Alerts Clinicians About Potential for Imported Hantavirus Cases | MedPage Today

Read original atvertexaisearch.cloud.google.com

Texas, United StatesConfidence 90%Jun 3, 2026

The CDC issued a Health Alert Network advisory to clinicians regarding potential imported Andes virus cases from a cruise ship outbreak, with several states monitoring individuals.

Species mentioned

  • human

Source articles

Every claim above is derived from publicly available reporting. Click through to read the original at the publisher.

  • Primary
    CDC Alerts Clinicians About Potential for Imported Hantavirus Cases | MedPage Today

    vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com · 2026-06-03

    The CDC issued a Health Alert Network advisory on May 12, 2026, urging clinicians to be aware of potential imported Andes virus cases from the cruise ship outbreak. While broad spread in the U.S. is 'extremely unlikely,' early symptoms can be confused with other illnesses. Several state health departments, including Arizona, California, Georgia, Texas, Virginia, New Jersey, and Maryland, are monitoring individuals.

  • Reference
    CDC Alerts Clinicians About Potential for Imported Hantavirus Cases | MedPage Today

    vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com · 2026-06-03

    The CDC issued a Health Alert Network (HAN) advisory on May 8, 2026, to inform clinicians and health departments about the potential for imported cases of hantavirus disease in connection with the Andes virus outbreak aboard a cruise ship. While the risk of broad spread in the U.S. is considered 'extremely unlikely,' the agency noted that early symptoms can be easily confused with influenza or other viral illnesses. Several state health departments, including Arizona, California, Georgia, Texas, Virginia, New Jersey, and Maryland, have confirmed they are monitoring individuals in their respect

  • Reference
    What to Know and Communicate About Hantavirus

    publichealthcollaborative.org · 2026-06-03

    The CDC provides guidance on the Andes strain hantavirus outbreak linked to a cruise ship, noting that as of May 15, 2026, there were nine confirmed cases, two suspected cases, and three deaths. US citizens from the ship are being monitored in several states, including Nebraska, Georgia, New Jersey, Texas, California, Virginia, and Arizona. The risk to the American public is considered extremely low, and prevention measures focus on rodent control.

  • Reference
    What to Know and Communicate About Hantavirus

    vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com · 2026-06-03

    Global and national officials are actively monitoring and responding to a hantavirus outbreak linked to a cruise ship in the Atlantic Ocean, caused by the Andes strain. As of May 15, 2026, there have been nine confirmed cases, two suspected cases, and three deaths. US passengers exposed to the virus are being quarantined or monitored in several states, including Nebraska, Georgia, New Jersey, Texas, California, Virginia, and Arizona. The risk to the American public is extremely low.

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.