A public health expert explains why the United States is repeating the same mistake with the Hantavirus response as with COVID-19, particularly with communication and testing.

The 17 passengers are set to be transferred to a special quarantine center in Nebraska to ‘assess them for risk’

American passengers from the hantavirus-stricken MV Hondius are being cared for in Nebraska and Atlanta as health officials decide how to move forward.

The evacuees will be taken to the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha for further assessment, while one passenger who tested positive will be taken to a biocontainment…

The 17 U.S. passengers evacuated from the MV Hondius would first be taken to the University of Nebraska Medical Center, which has a federally funded quarantine facility.

Americans who were on board the cruise ship at the center of hantavirus outbreak are headed to Nebraska to quarantine. Here's what that is like.

One passenger has tested positive for Andes virus, a rare type of hantavirus, while another is showing mild symptoms, health officials say.

Passengers and close contacts, some with symptoms, monitored until not contagious: From Santa Clara, California, to Nebraska, to Emory University in Atlanta.

The World Health Organization is leading outbreak efforts, but the U.S. is no longer part of the WHO. Here's how that impacts hantavirus communications.

The disease is much deadlier than COVID, but much harder to spread.

A public health expert explains why the United States is repeating the same mistake with the Hantavirus response as with COVID-19, particularly with communication and testing.

All of the American cruise passengers who are quarantining in Nebraska are asymptomatic for hantavirus, officials said. Here's the latest.

An oncologist traveling on a cruise ship amid a hantavirus outbreak says he's the lone American isolated at a special biocontainment unit in Nebraska. Dr.

A Dutch couple believed to have brought hantavirus aboard the ship spent months traveling in Argentina, Chile and Uruguay before boarding.

For some experts, the outbreak is raising broader concerns about how equipped the U.S. is to respond to future infectious disease threats.

The next big one won't come from the hantavirus cruise outbreak, but there are still lessons to take away from it, experts say.

The number of people being monitored for hantavirus in the United States has grown to 41, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday.

The sole American who returned a positive test aboard the MV Hondius has since tested negative three times, bringing the total number of reported cases down to 10.

Hantavirus misinformation is spreading fast. COVID trauma and social media algorithms may be to blame