A New Zealand passenger from the hantavirus-stricken cruise ship MV Hondius is in hospital quarantine in Taiwan, Taiwanese health authorities said Friday.

The person, who has tested negative for the rare disease and is showing no symptoms, arrived in Taiwan on May 7 after disembarking from a cruise ship in St Helena on April 24.
Taiwan’s Centers for Disease Control (CDC) was informed by New Zealand authorities on Wednesday that the person was in Taiwan, CDC spokeswoman Tseng Shu-hui told AFP.
The person was admitted to the hospital the same day and will remain there until June 6, Tseng said.
Tseng declined to provide details about the person’s age, gender or current location in Taiwan.
“Right now, we believe their probability of developing the disease is relatively low,” Tseng said.
“Their last exposure to the other passengers was on the 25th (April), which is about 20 days ago.
See also: Hong Kong urged to step up rodent controls despite no locals on cruise ship hit by hantavirus
The virus has a potential incubation period of 42 days.
CDC director-general Lo Yi-chun told reporters the person did not return to New Zealand after leaving the cruise ship, but he would not provide information on the route they took to Taiwan.
New Zealand’s de facto embassy in Taipei declined to comment.
Health authorities have repeatedly stressed that the wider risk to public health from the outbreak of the Andean strain of hantavirus – the only one known to spread between humans – is low.
Globally, the death toll remains at three.
The ship left Argentina on April 1, charting a course across the Atlantic Ocean.
There are no vaccines or specific treatments, but health officials have said the risk is low and dismissed comparisons to the Covid-19 pandemic.










