Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Finland Classifies Andes Hantavirus as Public Health Risk


(MENAFN) Finland has officially designated the Andes strain of hantavirus a "public health risk" following reports of possible exposure within the country, a public broadcaster reported Tuesday — a classification that unlocks compensation for individuals required to isolate from work after potential contact with the virus.

Despite the formal designation, Finnish Social Security Minister Sanni Grahn-Laasonen moved to temper public concern, stressing that authorities view the current threat as contained.

The virus poses "a very small public health risk at the moment," she said.

The decision follows a disclosure by Finland's Institute for Health and Welfare that two individuals may have been exposed to the hantavirus during a commercial flight last month.

The broader outbreak, traced to the Andes strain, has so far produced five confirmed cases, three of which proved fatal, according to officials from the World Health Organization (WHO).

Scientists have identified the pathogen as the rare Andes variant — a strain of particular concern to global health authorities as the only known form of hantavirus capable of spreading directly between humans, typically through close physical contact.

The WHO confirmed that two passengers who subsequently died had traveled across Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay before boarding the hantavirus-affected cruise ship MV Hondius — a vessel now at the center of international health scrutiny as investigators work to trace the full scope of potential exposures.

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