I am sure you have been following this Hantavirus outbreak in a cruise ship, likely infected from the Andes range of Argentina.
Few physicians world wide have ever encountered a case. I happen to have encountered two, and the first confirmed long after the patient's death.
This virus was first named after a serious of pneumonia cases with a high death rate in the Four Corners States back in 1998. The virus was identified at that time and named Hantavirus.
I had a bad case of pneumonia leading to severe ARDS and renal failure in a 19 year old Indian male from the Devil's Lake Indian reservation in ND.
The patient unfortunately died, but I never identified the cause. So I had the coroner order a PM. The PM shed no light on the matter. So I had the pathologist take some serum and have it frozen on perpetuity in the lab freezer. When the Four Corners outbreak occurred and we had a serological test for the Hantavirus, I had the specimen thawed out and tested for Hantavirus. So that young man had died of Hantavirus.
A few years after Hantavirus was identified we had a new recruit on our team who had a young woman with a severe pneumonia that she did not know the cause of. This case also from Devil's Lake. I thought the case had a lot of similarities to my previous case and ordered Hantavirus serology, which was positive. After a massive prolonged fight we saved the young woman's life.
Now the virus was believed to be only transmitted from Rodents, which I think previously it was.
Now this Andes strain of the virus is transmissible human to human, and there is now no doubt about that, but the degree of its infectivity is currently unknown.
This is a serious and very worrying situation as this illness is far, far more serious and lethal than Covid. Mortality per case is at least 40%, with almost all cases needing ventilator support and a lot dialysis as well.
Currently there are 3 deaths of passengers from the stricken ship, and 8 individuals from ship seriously ill, including the ship's physician.
There are currently 68 contacts world wide under close observation.
The concerns are that this virus is clearly mutating and becoming increasingly transmissible. So at this time this is a very serious evolving infectious disease situation.
Clearly a vaccine for this infection needs to be developed at warp speed, and yet we have a vaccine denier in JFK Junior who is secretary of Health. Congress must act now to sort this out.