WHO Traces Passengers After Hantavirus Death on Flight

Health authorities are in a race against time. The World Health Organization has launched a contact tracing effort targeting passengers who shared a flight with a Dutch woman who later died of hantavirus — a rare and serious viral infection that has now claimed multiple lives linked to a single cruise ship.

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The woman had been a passenger aboard the cruise ship Hondius. After falling ill, she disembarked at the remote island of Saint Helena and boarded a flight to South Africa on April 25. Her condition worsened significantly during that journey.

She passed away shortly after reaching a hospital in Johannesburg, where tests confirmed hantavirus as the cause. Her husband had already died from the same virus while still on the ship.

Tracing the Flight and the Island
The flight carried 82 passengers and 6 crew members.

South African health authorities have since contacted the airline, Airlink, asking them to notify everyone on board to reach out to their local health services as a precautionary measure. The WHO has confirmed its belief that the virus spread between people on board the Hondius, which makes identifying close contacts particularly urgent.

The island of Saint Helena is also conducting its own contact tracing.

Sick passengers from the cruise ship came ashore there, raising concerns about potential exposure to residents. A small number of people on the island have been advised to self-isolate as a precaution. Authorities there were quick to clarify, however, that the virus has not been detected on the island itself, and they do not consider the situation a cause for widespread alarm.

Saint Helena is home to just over 4,000 people.

The Ship Heads to Spain
While the tracing operatio.

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