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04:02 AM UTC · WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2026 LA ERA · Global
May 6, 2026 · Updated 04:02 AM UTC
Health

Experts downplay human transmission risk following hantavirus outbreak on cruise ship

Professor Adam Taylor of Lancaster University states the hantavirus is not known to spread between humans despite reports of an outbreak near Cape Verde.

Lucía Paredes

1 min read

Experts downplay human transmission risk following hantavirus outbreak on cruise ship
A cruise ship near Cape Verde

Health experts are urging calm following reports of a hantavirus outbreak aboard a cruise ship near Cape Verde.

According to a report from France 24, the virus is not currently known to spread from person to person.

Adam Taylor, a Professor of Anatomy at Lancaster University, addressed the situation via a France 24 interview. He emphasized that the risk of widespread contagion remains incredibly low.

"This virus is not known for human-to-human transmission," Taylor stated, according to the outlet.

Scientific perspective on transmission

While investigations into the cruise ship incident continue, Taylor resisted calls for alarmism. He focused on providing an evidence-based perspective to counter the rapid spread of global health fears.

Specialists noted that clarity is as vital as containment during such outbreaks. The professor insisted that the risk to the general public is minimal even as authorities monitor the situation.

As of May 2026, no evidence has emerged to suggest the virus can move between travelers on the vessel. Authorities continue to investigate the source of the exposure.

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