Experts explain why hantavirus is not the new Covid

Published May 12, 2026
Passengers evacuated from the cruise ship MV Hondius, which was affected by a hantavirus outbreak, walk after disembarking at Eindhoven Air Base, Netherlands on May 12, 2026. —Reuters
Passengers evacuated from the cruise ship MV Hondius, which was affected by a hantavirus outbreak, walk after disembarking at Eindhoven Air Base, Netherlands on May 12, 2026. —Reuters

PARIS: A deadly hantavirus outbreak on a cruise ship has revived bitter memories of when Covid-19 first emerged, but health experts have emphasised the two viruses are very different — and have sought to assuage fears of another pandemic. Here is what you need to know.

New or old?

After the first cases of Covid in late 2019, it was referred to as the “novel coronavirus” because it was a brand new pathogen. The virus rapidly engulfed the world, sending countries into punishing lockdowns and crippling the global economy.

The exact number of people killed by Covid is difficult to determine, but the World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates it was at least 20 million. Unlike Covid, hantavirus is not a new pathogen.

It was first described among soldiers fighting in the Korean War in the early 1950s. Cases of hantavirus are regularly recorded across the world, particularly in Asia and Europe. It has long been monitored in areas where the virus is endemic.

Transmission and symptoms

Humans almost always catch hantavirus by being exposed to the saliva, urine or droppings of wild rodents. The most common way is to inhale dust from droppings.

The Andes hantavirus strain, which caused the recent outbreak on the MV Hondius cruise ship, is the only one out of more than 30 species known to be able to transmit between humans. But even this is rare, with only a handful of previously documented cases.

After being infected with Andes, it takes between one and six weeks for symptoms to appear. This is vastly shorter than for Covid, which has an incubation period of seven to 10 days.

Human-to-human transmission of Andes “requires very specific conditions of close proximity, overcrowding, or an underlying health condition — far beyond what is known for other respiratory viruses,” including Covid, Virginie Sauvage, the head of France’s National Reference Centre for Hantaviruses, said.

The last major outbreak in 2018 killed at least 11 people in Argentina, where the Andes species is endemic. Two of the three people who died in the latest outbreak travelled to Argentina before boarding the cruise ship. Research into the 2018 outbreak found that the majority of transmission occurred on the first day the infected person showed symptoms.

Hantaviruses in the Americas such as Andes can cause severe respiratory and cardiac distress, as well as haemorrhagic fever. In comparison, Covid is solely a respiratory illness, and can cause fever, shortness of breath, body aches, fatigue and loss of smell.

Too lethal for a pandemic?

The Andes hantavirus may be too rapidly fatal to spark a pandemic, explained biologist Raul Gonzalez Ittig of Argentina’s scientific research agency Conicet. “For a pandemic to occur, the virus cannot be so lethal that it kills 50 per cent of the population, because it quickly kills everyone and runs out of opportunities to spread,” Ittig said.

The Andes hantavirus is thought to have a mortality rate of around 40pc. “So deaths start appearing quickly, isolation measures are put in place quickly, and the chain of transmission is rapidly stopped,” Ittig said. Covid, on the other hand, “infects thousands of people and only later do deaths start to accumulate,” he said.

Published in Dawn, May 12th, 2026

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