爆发汉坦病毒的邮轮抵达加那利群岛,乘客及部分船员将被撤离


2026年5月10日 / 美国东部时间凌晨1:04 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻

作者
法里斯·塔尼奥斯 新闻编辑

一艘遭遇致命汉坦病毒疫情的荷兰籍邮轮已于周日清晨抵达西班牙加那利群岛,当地卫生官员将启动复杂程序,疏散船上乘客和大部分船员,并将他们遣返回各自国家。

这艘名为“洪迪乌斯号”(MV Hondius)的邮轮目前搭载着来自15个以上国家的近150名乘客,其中包括17名美国人。在西班牙同意接收该船后,它于本周早些时候从佛得角起航,前往特内里费岛的格拉纳迪亚港——加那利群岛中最大的岛屿。

路透社拍摄的视频显示了该船在格拉纳迪亚港附近的画面。据法新社记者报道,“洪迪乌斯号”由西班牙国民警卫队的一艘船只护航。

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《洪迪乌斯号》因爆发汉坦病毒疫情,于2026年5月10日抵达加那利群岛最大岛屿特内里费岛的格拉纳迪亚港。佩德罗·努涅斯 / 路透社

世界卫生组织表示,截至目前,船上仍未出现有症状的感染者。

此次疫情已确认或疑似出现9例汉坦病毒感染病例,其中包括3例死亡病例:一对荷兰夫妇和一名德国女子。

邮轮运营商海洋探险公司(Oceanwide Expeditions)表示,所有乘客以及约60名船员中的部分人员将于周日开始搭乘最大载客量5至10人的救生艇撤离邮轮。此次疏散行动由世界卫生组织及其他多家卫生机构协调安排。世卫组织总干事谭德塞博士在邮轮抵达前已前往特内里费岛。

海洋探险公司称,上述人员下船后,将由少量留守船员负责补给物资,随后启程前往荷兰鹿特丹,预计航程约需5天。

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2026年5月9日,西班牙加那利群岛特内里费岛格拉纳迪亚港的预定接待点,国民警卫队成员正在值守。克里斯·麦格拉斯 / 盖蒂图片社

抵达特内里费岛后,美国乘客将乘坐由美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)和卫生与公众服务部派出的专机返回美国。

美国疾控中心表示,将派遣一支由流行病学家和医疗专业人员组成的团队前往加那利群岛,“对每名美国乘客进行接触风险评估,并提供所需的监测级别建议”。

此次医疗遣返专机将在内布拉斯加州奥马哈的奥夫特空军基地降落,美国乘客将被转运至内布拉斯加大学医学中心的专用生物安全隔离单元。

内布拉斯加大学医学中心国家检疫部门医疗主任迈克尔·瓦德曼表示,每名美国人将拥有独立房间进行为期不定的隔离。

据美国疾控中心介绍,汉坦病毒是一类通过啮齿动物的尿液、粪便或唾液传播给人类的疾病。接触病毒后,症状最长可能在8周后才会显现。

世卫组织称,在拉丁美洲发现的安第斯型汉坦病毒是目前已知唯一可通过人际传播的毒株,谭德塞将公众感染风险评估为“低”,美国疾控中心代理主任杰伊·巴塔查里亚博士也认同这一评估。

“无症状感染者不会传播汉坦病毒,传播需要密切接触,美国公众面临的风险极低,”巴塔查里亚在周三的一份声明中说道。

疫情源头仍在调查中。不过谭德塞本周表示,两名死亡的荷兰乘客——70岁的男子及其69岁的妻子——在登船前,曾在阿根廷、智利和乌拉圭进行了数周的观鸟旅行,这些地区存在已知携带安第斯型病毒的啮齿动物物种。

世卫组织称,该男子于4月6日出现症状,4月11日在船上死亡,但由于当时其症状与其他呼吸道病毒相似,未采集样本,当时并未怀疑是汉坦病毒感染。

他的妻子随后在邮轮停靠英国海外领土圣赫勒拿岛时下船。4月25日,她在飞往南非约翰内斯堡的航班上出现严重症状,并于次日在南非去世。检测确认她感染了汉坦病毒。

据世卫组织消息,这名德国女子于4月28日出现症状,5月2日在船上死亡。

另有三名患者本周被空运至荷兰接受紧急医疗救治,一名在下船后出现症状的瑞士男子正在苏黎世接受治疗。一名英国男子被医疗撤离至南非,另一名已下船的英国国民则在英国海外领地特里斯坦-达库尼亚岛住院治疗。

海洋探险公司称,已有来自约12个国家的32名乘客在圣赫勒拿岛下船,其中包括后来去世的荷兰女子。在疫情发现前返回美国的美国乘客,正由加利福尼亚州、佐治亚州、德克萨斯州、弗吉尼亚州和亚利桑那州的州卫生机构进行监测。

“洪迪乌斯号”于4月1日从阿根廷乌斯怀亚起航开始巡航,先后前往南大西洋多个岛屿,包括南乔治亚岛和南桑威奇群岛、特里斯坦-达库尼亚岛、戈夫岛,并于4月21日至24日停靠圣赫勒拿岛。

随后该船在西非外海的佛得角群岛附近锚泊数日,之后启程前往加那利群岛。

艾米丽·梅·查霍尔和马克·奥斯本对本文亦有贡献。

Cruise ship stricken by hantavirus reaches Canary Islands, where passengers, some crew, will be evacuated

May 10, 2026 / 1:04 AM EDT / CBS News

By

Faris Tanyos News Editor

A Dutch-flagged cruise ship that was hit by a deadly hantavirus outbreak reached Spain’s Canary Islands early Sunday morning, where health officials will begin the complex process of evacuating the passengers and most of the crew, and repatriating them to their respective countries.

The MV Hondius, currently carrying nearly 150 people from more than 15 countries, including 17 Americans, had set sail earlier this week from Cape Verde to the port of Granadilla on Tenerife — the largest of the Canary Islands — after Spain agreed to take the ship.

Video from Reuters showed the ship near the port of Granadilla. Hondius was escorted by a Spanish Civil Guard vessel, Agence France-Press journalists reported.

The cruise ship MV Hondius arrives at the port of Granadilla in Tenerife, the largest of the Canary Islands, after being affected by a hantavirus outbreak. May 10, 2026. Pedro Nunes / REUTERS

The World Health Organization has said that, so far, none of those still aboard were showing symptoms.

There are at least nine confirmed or suspected cases of hantavirus linked to the outbreak, including three fatalities, a Dutch couple and a German woman.

Oceanwide Expeditions, the ship’s operator, says that all passengers and a portion of the approximately 60 crew members will begin evacuating the ship Sunday using launch boats that carry a maximum of five to 10 people. The evacuation is being coordinated by WHO and several other health organizations. WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Ghebreyesus traveled to Tenerife prior to the ship’s arrival.

After those people have disembarked, a skeleton crew will take on supplies and then begin the journey to Rotterdam, Netherlands, which is expected to take about five days, Oceanwide Expeditions said.

Members of the Guardia Civil stand watch at the expected reception point for passengers from the MV Hondius at the Granadilla Port on May 9, 2026 in Tenerife, part of the Canary Islands, Spain. Chris McGrath / Getty Images

Once removed from the Hondius, the Americans will be flown back to the U.S. in a plane that was sent by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Department of Health and Human Services.

The CDC said it was sending a team of epidemiologists and medical professionals to the Canary Islands to “conduct an exposure risk assessment for each American passenger and provide recommendations for the level of monitoring required.”

The medical repatriation flight will land at Offutt Air Force Base in Omaha, Nebraska, and the Americans will be taken to a special biocontainment unit at the University of Nebraska Medical Center.

Michael Wadman, medical director of the National Quarantine Unit at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, said that each American will have their own room while they quarantine for an unspecified amount of time.

Hantaviruses are a family of diseases that are spread to people from rodents through urine, droppings or saliva, according to the CDC. It can take up to eight weeks after contact for symptoms to develop.

WHO says that the Andes strain, which is found in Latin America, is the only one that is known to be able to transmit the virus through human-to-human contact, with Ghebreyesus assessing the public risk as “low,” an assessment which was echoed by acting CDC director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya.

“Hantavirus is not spread by people without symptoms, transmission requires close contact, and the risk to the American public is very low,” Bhattacharya said in a statement Wednesday.

The source of the outbreak remains under investigation. However, prior to boarding the ship, the Dutch couple who died, a 70-year-old man and his 69-year-old wife, are believed to have spent weeks traveling through Argentina, Chile and Uruguay on a bird-watching trip in areas where the species of rodent known to carry the Andes virus is present, Ghebreyesus said this week.

The man developed symptoms on April 6 and died on the ship on April 11, WHO said, but no samples were taken because his symptoms were similar to those of other respiratory viruses, and hantavirus was not suspected at the time.

His wife then went ashore when the ship docked on the British territorial island of St. Helena. She showed serious symptoms on a flight to Johannesburg, South Africa, on April 25, and died in South Africa the following day, WHO said. Testing confirmed she had contracted hantavirus.

The German woman showed symptoms on April 28 and died aboard the ship on May 2, according to WHO.

Three other patients were flown off the ship to the Netherlands for emergency medical care this week, and a Swiss man who began showing symptoms after disembarking the ship was receiving care in Zurich. A British man was medically evacuated to South Africa, while another British national who had disembarked the ship is hospitalized on the island of Tristan da Cunha, a British territory.

Oceanwide Expeditions said 32 passengers from about a dozen countries had disembarked the Hondius in St. Helena, including the Dutch woman who died days later. Those American passengers who returned to the U.S. prior to the discovery of the outbreak were being monitored by state health agencies in California, Georgia, Texas, Virginia and Arizona.

The Hondius set sail for its cruise April 1 from Ushuaia, Argentina, which took it to several islands in the south Atlantic, including the South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands, Tristan da Cunha, Gough Island and then St. Helena from April 21 to April 24.

The vessel then anchored off the coast of Cape Verde, an archipelago located off West Africa, for several days before heading to the Canary Islands.

Emily Mae Czachor and Mark Osborne contributed to this report.

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