FLORIDA'S ONLY JOINT COMMISSION-ACCREDITED URGENT CARE
FLORIDA'S ONLY JOINT COMMISSION-ACCREDITED URGENT CARE · ONE OF JUST 8 NATIONWIDE
Medically reviewed by Shane D. Naidoo, MD
Medical Director, TrufaMED Urgent Care & Concierge Medicine
Board-Certified, Emergency Medicine
Last reviewed: May 10, 2026
The May 2026 cruise ship hantavirus cluster has put a virus most physicians rarely see into the news cycle. The strain involved is called Andes virus, and it is meaningfully different from the hantaviruses Americans usually hear about. This article explains the difference, and why that difference matters for how patients should think about exposure, symptoms, and risk.
I work emergency medicine in Miami. The single question I have heard most this week from patients is some version of: "Is this the same as the hantavirus my friend in Arizona told me about?" The honest answer is: similar family, very different behavior.
Hantaviruses are a group of related viruses carried by rodents. There are dozens of identified strains worldwide, organized roughly by geography and host species. Most cause one of two clinical syndromes when they infect humans:
Andes virus causes a variant of HPS sometimes called Hantavirus Cardiopulmonary Syndrome (HCPS) because cardiovascular collapse is a more prominent feature than in classic HPS. Same family, slightly different presentation.
Of all known hantaviruses, Andes virus has one feature no other strain has confirmed: person-to-person transmission. Every other hantavirus that infects humans does so through contact with infected rodents, their droppings, urine, or saliva. The classic case is someone cleaning out a long-unused cabin or barn in the southwestern United States and inhaling aerosolized particles from rodent droppings.
Andes virus does this too. Its primary host is the long-tailed pygmy rice rat (Oligoryzomys longicaudatus), found in southern Argentina and Chile. But Andes virus has also been documented to spread directly from one symptomatic human to another, particularly in close, prolonged contact settings — household members, healthcare workers without appropriate protective equipment, and now, on a cruise ship.
This person-to-person transmission is why a cruise ship outbreak is plausible at all. Sin Nombre virus, the dominant U.S. hantavirus, would not produce a cluster on a ship in this way. Andes virus can.
Hearing that a virus spreads from one human to another tends to trigger a COVID-like fear response. That fear, in this case, is not warranted at the population level.
Andes virus transmission requires close, sustained contact with someone who is actively symptomatic. Casual contact — passing someone in a hallway, sharing public transportation, brief social interactions — is extremely unlikely to result in transmission. The documented household transmission cases involved family members caring for severely ill patients over days, often without barrier precautions.
The CDC has explicitly stated the risk to the U.S. public from the current cluster is extremely low. The seven passengers from the MV Hondius who returned to homes in Arizona, California, Georgia, Texas, and Virginia are being monitored and as of mid-May none are symptomatic. No documented household transmission has occurred among their families.
For patients trying to make sense of conflicting headlines, here is the practical comparison:
Three practical implications:
If you have not been on a cruise and you do not handle wild rodents, your Andes virus risk is essentially zero regardless of what the news cycle suggests. Continue normal life.
If you have been on a cruise within the last eight weeks and you develop new fever, severe muscle aches, or respiratory symptoms, get evaluated by a physician. Mention the cruise on your intake form. The probability is still low that any individual symptom set is hantavirus, but the cruise context shifts the differential diagnosis enough that it is worth checking. Our companion article covers the symptom timeline and decision tree in detail.
If you live with someone who has recently been on a cruise and they are symptomatic, basic precautions matter: avoid sharing eating utensils, do not handle their bodily fluids without gloves, and seek medical evaluation for the symptomatic person promptly. Once a person is past the symptomatic phase, transmission risk drops to essentially zero.
For symptom evaluation in any patient with a recent cruise history or other exposure concern, our process is:
We do not stock antiviral therapy for hantavirus because there is no specific antiviral treatment available for any hantavirus strain. Care is supportive, and severe cases require ICU-level support that is delivered at a hospital, not at urgent care. Our role is recognition, ruling out the more common causes, and rapid escalation when needed.
The May 2026 cruise ship Andes virus cluster is a meaningful public health event but not a public emergency for U.S. patients. The virus is real, the deaths are tragic, and the person-to-person transmission feature distinguishes Andes virus from other hantaviruses. None of that changes the practical advice for Miami patients: monitor for the next eight weeks if you have been on a cruise, get evaluated for any unexplained respiratory or febrile illness in that window, and continue normal life otherwise.
If you have questions or need a clinical evaluation, call (305) 537-6396 or walk in to our Surfside clinic at 9445 Harding Avenue. We are open seven days a week with a board-certified physician on every shift.
Sources cited: CDC Hantavirus Situation Summary May 2026, WHO Disease Outbreak News May 2026, CDC HAN Notice 528, NPR coverage May 7, 2026. This article will be updated as additional clinical data becomes available.