The UK has sent a rapid response mobile laboratory to the island of St Helena after an outbreak of hantavirus on a cruise ship, as 10 Britons are flown home in attempts to protect them from the rat-borne virus. The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) announced on Friday evening that a three-person team from the UK Public Health Rapid Support Team (UK-PHRST) was sent to the UK overseas territories of St Helena and Ascension in the South Atlantic. The team's deployment comes in response to a request for help from the island's government. The move follows earlier news that 10 Britons from these South Atlantic islands, connected to the MV Hondius cruise ship outbreak, are to be brought to the UK in efforts to shield them from the illness.The people, thought to be residents of St Helena and Ascension, are being 'brought to the UK to complete their self-isolation as a precautionary measure', the UKHSA said. None are symptomatic and their final destination is unknown.Once in Britain, they will get access to NHS infectious disease specialists should they become ill, and the UKHSA said it will 'set out where they will isolate in due course'.The deployed specialist team includes microbiologists Clara Milroy and Kimberley Steeds, who will support with PCR testing for hantavirus as well as testing for other conditions. They are joined by infection prevention and control expert Anthony Twyman who will support the 54-bed local Jamestown General Hospital in their handling of potential cases and treatment. The trio are expected to stay on the island for the next eight weeks.Dr Edmund Newman, director of the UK Public Health Rapid Support Team, said: 'This deployment reflects UKHSA's commitment to responding rapidly to health threats wherever they emerge and to supporting our international partners in protecting public health globally. The outbreak of the respiratory disease, which is spread through contact with infected rodents, on MV Hondius has led to at least 11 reported cases among passengers, including three deaths The UK has sent a rapid response mobile laboratory to the island of St Helena (pictured) after an outbreak of hantavirus on a cruise ship'Our teams continue to work closely with all those affected by this outbreak, both in the UK and overseas, to ensure all necessary support is in place. The risk to the general public remains very low.'It comes as 20 British nationals from the MV Hondius, together with a German who is a UK resident, and a Japanese passenger, who have been isolating at Arrowe Park Hospital on the Wirral in Merseyside, prepare to leave the facility.They were taken there on Sunday night after the ship docked in Tenerife for a three-day isolation and assessment period. They will isolate for another 42 days at home.The outbreak of the respiratory disease on the cruise ship, which is spread through contact with infected rodents, has led to at least 11 reported cases among passengers, including three deaths. Public Health Scotland warned on Thursday that a small number of people in Scotland have potentially had contact with the virus and that it was working to get in touch with 'a small number of individuals' who could be affected. The team's deployment on Friday follows the naming of a Briton among the six people who arrived on the same day at a remote quarantine facility in Australia after sailing on the hantavirus-affected cruise. A flight organised by the Australian Government left the Netherlands on Thursday morning carrying the six passengers - four Australian citizens, a UK citizen and a New Zealander - who were all evacuated off MV Hondius.The six passengers were in 'good health', showed no symptoms, and recently tested negative for the virus, Health Minister Mark Butler told a news conference in Canberra, adding that they will be held in quarantine for at least three weeks. A Briton is among the six people who have arrived on Friday at a remote quarantine facility in Australia after they all sailed on a hantavirus-affected cruise The deployed specialist team includes microbiologists Clara Milroy and Kimberley Steeds, who will support with PCR testing for hantavirus as well as testing for other conditionsThey were all made to wear heavy personal protective equipment (PPE) as the plane flew them to an air force base in Perth, western Australia, on Friday morning.From there, the group were taken to the Bullsbrook Centre for National Resilience, a 500-bed quarantine facility where the six will be required to stay for at least three weeks.The government has yet to determine how to handle the passengers' isolation after the initial three-week quarantine, given the virus' potential incubation period of 42 days, the minister said.Meanwhile a British man was made to quarantine in Milan over hantavirus fears, despite not having any symptoms, and was taken from the bed and breakfast he was staying in, where he will now have to remain locked up for a month.The man, in his 60s, was stopped at the guesthouse where he was staying in the Pasteur area of Milan, along with a 50-year-old man who had joined him in Italy.Officials in Milan said they had been alerted by the UK Ministry of Health and had traced the men to their B&B late on Tuesday night, and he and his companion were taken to the Sacco hospital by police.Both have tested negative for the hantavirus, but the older man has been told to remain in Italy as he is deemed a 'close contact' of Dutch woman Mirijam Schilperood, who died in South Africa and was onboard MV Hondius.Schilperood, who had been on the April 25 Airlink flight from St Helena to Johannesburg, was sitting in 13C, a subsequent positive hantavirus case sat in 14B, while the British passenger was in 15F. The UK has sent a rapid response mobile laboratory (pictured) to the island of St Helena after an outbreak of hantavirus on a cruise ship