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Five of 18 American passengers who were being held at the federal National Quarantine Unit (NQU) at the University of Nebraska Medical Center after exposure to the Andes hantavirus have been permitted to return to their home states, U.S. health officials said June 1â2, 2026.
The group was repatriated after a deadly hantavirus outbreak linked to the cruise ship MV Hondius in the South Atlantic.
The five people remain asymptomatic and will complete the remainder of a 42-day monitoring period at home under daily state public-health oversight and continuous 24/7 surveillance; federal officials arranged non-commercial transport with biocontainment measures.
Thirteen confirmed or probable cases, including three deaths, have been associated with the ship globally; no Andes virus infections have been confirmed in the United States.
Several other American passengers chose to remain at the NQU. Health authorities note hantavirus incubation can be up to 42 days and that the Andes strain can, in rare cases, transmit between people.
Officials say public risk in the U.S. remains low.








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