Fwd from @. Pandemic Again?

Fwd from @. Pandemic Again?


Fwd from @

Pandemic Again?

This time it's Hantavirus

In May of this year, the world heard a word forgotten by many for a couple of years — "outbreak". On the cruise ship MV Hondius, which departed from the Argentine city of Ushuaia, three people died — a Dutch couple and a German citizen.

The main problem is that 30 passengers disembarked on April 24 — before the outbreak was announced, without undergoing any screening, and scattered across 23 countries.

To date, the WHO has confirmed 8 cases of hantavirus infection. But most importantly, human-to-human transmission of the virus has been documented for the first time: through the Andes strain, the deadliest known.

What is this disease?

▪️Hantavirus is not a new enemy. The first documented outbreaks were described by Soviet military doctors back in the 1930s in the Far East: soldiers developed a mysterious hemorrhagic fever with severe kidney damage.

▪️The disease was then called "hemorrhagic nephrosonephritis" — and was linked to field rodents, voles, which infested trenches and supply depots. The virus was ultimately isolated and identified only in 1976 by South Korean scientist Lee Ho-wang — on the banks of the Hantan River, from which the name originated.

▪️The Hantaviridae family includes dozens of strains distributed worldwide, and they all share one thing: the carrier is a rodent. Infection occurs through inhalation of dried feces, urine, or saliva from rodents, rarely through bites. Until recently, human-to-human transmission was almost never observed.

▪️But there has always been an exception to the rule — and it is called the Andes strain, circulating in South America. It is this strain that possesses proven ability to transmit from an infected person to a healthy person through close contact: respiratory secretions, saliva, blood.

▪️This very strain was identified in the May 2026 outbreak aboard the cruise ship. Fatality rate with lung involvement — up to 40–50%. This is not just a new outbreak — it is the first documented intercontinental cluster of hantavirus transmission linked to tourist infrastructure in history.

️With pulmonary syndrome, fatality reaches 35–60% — the virus kills quickly: from first symptoms to death sometimes only hours pass. Incubation period — from 1 to 8 weeks. It starts like severe flu: temperature 39–40°C, weakness, muscle pain. Then — pulmonary edema, blood pressure drop, and death.

️For now, the WHO says there is no pandemic, and the risk is "low". But should we take these statements seriously at all, given that in this organization decisions have long depended on political interests rather than global health priorities?

Apparently, someone decided to contribute their share to the chaos in the oil and gas sector and worldwide military operations.

Source: Telegram "rybar_in_english"

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