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British passengers of hantavirus-hit cruise arrive at hospital in the UK

BIRKENHEAD, ENGLAND - MAY 10: The bus carrying the British passengers and crew being repatriated from the MV Hondius makes it's way to Arrowe Park Hospital on May 10, 2026 in Birkenhead, England. Twenty-two British passengers and crew from the MV Hondius, who have tested negative for Hantavirus, have been repatriated via charter flight from Tenerife and taken to Arrowe Park Hospital in Wirral for clinical assessment. They will undergo an initial 72-hour testing period in a dedicated accommodation block to determine if they can complete a mandatory 45-day isolation at home. (Photo by Ryan Jenkinson/Getty Images)
They have checked into Arrowe Park Hospital (Picture: Getty Images)

The 20 British passengers and crew evacuated from a cruise ship hit by the hantavirus have arrived at a Merseyside hospital.

The passengers flew into Manchester Airport on a chartered flight from Tenerife after the HV Hondius docked yesterday morning.

They were photographed arriving by coach at Arrowe Park Hospital in Wirral, with the driver seen wearing a face mask and a clear face shield.

The 20 passengers, along with one German national, who is a UK resident, and one Japanese passenger, have tested negative for hantavirus.

The UK Health Security Agency said that the patients had been ‘safely transferred’ to the hospital just after 8.40pm.

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They will now isolate for 72 hours in a dedicated accommodation block to determine if they can complete a 45-day isolation at home.

‘They’re going to be absolutely shattered’

None of the passengers has tested positive (Picture: Anadolu/Getty Images)
The passengers, crew, drivers and medical teams were all wearing protective equipment during the drive (Picture: Getty Images)

Janelle Holmes, CEO of Wirral University Teaching Hospital Trust, said the passengers will be able to phone their friends and family.

She told the BBC: ‘What we’ve learnt from past experience is they’re going to be absolutely shattered.

‘They’ve probably felt quite traumatised by the whole experience so the thing for us to do is to make sure that they’re here, they’re safe, they’re welcome.’

The Ministry of Defence says that the risk to the public remains very low.

At least two people aboard the HV Hondius sailing the Atlantic Ocean died of the hantavirus earlier this month.

They include Leo Schilperoord, 70, a ornithologist – a bird expert – who hopped back on the cruise after visiting a landfill to birdwatch in Argentina.

Leo Schilperoord (Picture: Facebook)

He was the first person to die, with his wife Miriam dying a few days later, trying to board a flight back home to the Netherlands from South Africa.

Another death is suspected to have been caused by hantavirus, while the World Health Organization says four other ship-goers are sickened with it.

There are also two suspected cases, including a British man who is on the tiny British archipelago of Tristan da Cunha in the South Atlantic.

What is hantavirus?

Hantavirus is a rare disease often caused by breathing in particles of dried droppings or urine from infected rodents.

Hantavirus’s flu-like symptoms, such as fever, chills and body aches, can take as long as eight weeks to show.

But as the disease develops, patients can experience shortness of breath and then lung or heart failure.

Officials say the risk of the virus becoming a pandemic – the worldwide spread of a disease – is low.

The current outbreak involves the Andes strain of hantavirus, which struggles to move between people as the virus burrows deep in the lungs.

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Those at highest risk of person-to-person transmission are people who have been in close quarters for a long time with an infected person.

Healthcare and agricultural workers are at the highest risk, as are people who may come into contact with mice and rodent droppings.

This includes people who travel to places where the virus is common and go hiking or visit rural areas.

People should wear gloves and an N95 face mask and use a bleach solution to wet surfaces when cleaning them.

Don’t sweep or vacuum either, health officials recommend, as this could whip up particles into the air that could be inhaled.

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