State Health Officer Dr. Scott Harris said during a conversation on social media sponsored by the Alabama Medical Association that the recent outbreak on a cruise ship will not turn into a COVID-like scenario.
) - Hantavirus is a deadly disease. About a third of those infected die, and there’s no antiviral medication to treat it, according to State Health Officer Dr. Scott Harris with the Alabama Department of Public Health.
At the same time, Dr. Harris said during a conversation on social media sponsored by the Alabama Medical Association that the recent outbreak on a cruise ship will not turn into a COVID-like scenario.
“The average Alabamian or even the average American really doesn’t need to be worried,” Dr. Harris said. He added that what makes hantavirus different is that scientists know what they’re dealing with unlike COVID. Hantavirus has been seen in America for around three decades, and the strains in the U.S. differ from the ones abroad.
“This is a virus in the form that we’re seeing spread person to person that doesn’t seem to exist in the United States as far as we know,” he said. “The rodent vector, the mouse and rat vector that carries this in South America doesn’t exist in the United States. ” Even if you do come down with a severe respiratory illness, it’s extremely unlikely hantavirus is the cause.
“It’s not something that most doctors are going to think about in an E.R. setting or in a clinical setting,” Dr. Harris said. If you’ve planned a cruise or another vacation this summer, Dr. Harris says don’t cancel or alter those plans.of hantavirus disease were reported in the United States since surveillance began in 1993. No cases have ever been reported in Alabama. Victim killed in Saturday Montgomery homicide identifiedMan charged in Sunday morning Montgomery shooting
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