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Hanta Virus International

Frequently Asked Questions

Quick answers to the most common public-health questions about hantavirus, ANDV airborne transmission, symptoms, treatment and prevention.

Guide & Prevention

Prevention protocols, clinical guidelines, and hantavirus variant reference.

WHO ERF · Grade 3

The active Andes orthohantavirus (ANDV) cluster is being tracked under the WHO Emergency Response Framework at its highest internal severity — Grade 3 — reflecting confirmed human-to-human transmission, elevated mortality, and the need for coordinated international surveillance, traveller screening and clinical preparedness in affected regions.

Biology & Transmission

Overview

Hantaviruses are a family of viruses spread mainly by rodents. They can cause diverse disease syndromes in people worldwide. Infection with any hantavirus can produce hantavirus disease in people.

Primary Vector: Deer Mouse, Cotton Rat, Rice Rat, White-footed Mouse.
Transmission: Primarily through aerosolized rodent excreta (urine, feces, saliva).
Symptoms: Fatigue, fever, muscle aches, followed by coughing and shortness of breath.
Incubation Data
1-8 WEEKS
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Prevention Protocols

Never sweep or vacuum rodent droppings — it aerosolises the virus.
Three core actions
1
Seal entry points

Close holes inside and outside the home with steel wool and caulk to block rodents.

2
Trap rodents safely

Use snap traps in active areas. Wear gloves; spray traps with disinfectant before disposal.

3
Clean with the wet method

Ventilate 30 min, wear N95/FFP2 + gloves, saturate with bleach 1:10, soak 5 min, wipe with paper towels, double-bag waste.

Read full WHO / CDC protocol
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Safe Cleaning of Rodent-Contaminated Areas: The Wet Method

Evidence-based protocol synthesised from WHO Hantavirus guidance, the U.S. CDC Cleaning Up After Rodents framework, ECDC factsheets and the U.S. EPA disinfectant list. Last reviewed 2026-05-13.

One-page Quick Checklist

A condensed reference. Always read the full sections below before performing cleanup.

Ventilation
Open doors/windows for 30 min before entering.
  • Open all doors and windows for at least 30 minutes.
  • Leave the building during ventilation; use cross-draught.
  • Do NOT use fans, leaf-blowers or forced-air systems.
  • High-risk persons (pregnant, immunocompromised, children) should not perform cleanup.
PPE
Gloves + N95 / FFP2 minimum. P100 / FFP3 for heavy contamination.
  • Disposable nitrile, latex, vinyl or rubber gloves.
  • N95 / FFP2 respirator (fit-tested) — not a surgical mask.
  • Heavy contamination: P100 / FFP3 respirator, coveralls, boots, eyewear, double gloves.
  • Closed shoes; clothing washable in hot water.
Wet method — 6 steps
Saturate → soak 5 min → lift → re-disinfect → mop → launder.
  • Bleach 1:10 (1 part bleach, 9 parts cold water), mixed fresh same-day.
  • Saturate droppings & nests with a low-pressure squirt bottle (no atomising spray).
  • Soak ≥ 5 minutes (10 min for heavy contamination).
  • Lift with paper towels — never sweep, never vacuum.
  • Wipe surface a second time with disinfectant; air-dry.
  • Mop floors; steam-clean upholstery; wash fabrics at 60 °C.
Waste disposal
Double-bag everything. Never burn or bury.
  • Spray dead rodents and traps with disinfectant; soak 5 min.
  • Place rodent + trap into a sealed plastic bag.
  • Double-bag and dispose per local regulations (household waste or biohazard).
  • Never handle rodents with bare hands. Never burn or bury contaminated material.
Post-exposure
Watch for symptoms 1–8 weeks. Seek care urgently.
  • Watch for fever, severe muscle aches, headache, fatigue, GI symptoms.
  • Later: cough and shortness of breath = medical emergency.
  • Window: 1 to 8 weeks after exposure.
  • Contact a clinician immediately and disclose the rodent exposure.

Hantaviruses are transmitted to humans almost exclusively through aerosolised rodent excreta — urine, droppings, saliva and nesting material that become airborne when disturbed. The single most important rule of household and occupational decontamination is therefore deceptively simple: never generate dust. Sweeping with a dry broom, shaking out blankets, beating mattresses or running a household vacuum cleaner over a contaminated surface all release virus-laden particles into the breathing zone of the person doing the cleaning. The international consensus — codified by the WHO, the U.S. CDC and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) — is that contaminated areas must be cleaned exclusively by a wet method: surfaces are saturated with disinfectant before they are touched, allowed to soak, and then wiped up with disposable absorbent material that is sealed and discarded.

1. Before you enter the space

Closed cabins, sheds, basements, attics, barns and storage rooms that have been undisturbed for weeks or months carry the highest risk. WHO and CDC both recommend opening all doors and windows for at least 30 minutes before entering and then leaving the building during ventilation. Use cross-draught if possible. Do not use forced-air systems, fans or leaf-blowers, which re-aerosolise settled dust. People with chronic respiratory conditions, immunocompromised individuals, pregnant people and children should not perform the cleaning.

2. Personal protective equipment (PPE)

For light contamination in well-ventilated indoor areas, the minimum PPE recommended by CDC and ECDC is:

  • Disposable rubber, latex, vinyl or nitrile gloves.
  • An N95 / FFP2 respirator (a fit-tested device, not a surgical mask) when handling visible droppings, urine, nests, dead rodents or working in enclosed spaces.
  • Closed shoes and clothing that can be washed in hot water immediately afterwards.

For heavy infestations, structures closed for long periods, or any setting with active rodent activity, WHO advises full PPE: a P100/FFP3 respirator with HEPA-equivalent filter, disposable coveralls, rubber boots, protective eyewear and a second pair of gloves. Heavy contamination should normally be handled by a professional pest-control or environmental-services operator following local occupational-health rules.

3. Preparing the disinfectant

The reference disinfectant in WHO and CDC documents is freshly prepared sodium hypochlorite (household bleach) at a 1:10 dilution — one part household bleach (typically 5–6% sodium hypochlorite) to nine parts cold water. The solution loses activity within roughly 24 hours and must be mixed on the day of use, in a labelled container, never combined with ammonia or other cleaning chemicals.

Where bleach is not appropriate (e.g. delicate surfaces, food-contact areas, sensitive electronics nearby), use a commercial disinfectant explicitly registered against enveloped viruses by your national authority — for example a product on the U.S. EPA List L: Disinfectants Effective Against Emerging Viral Pathogens, or a national equivalent. Follow the contact-time on the product label; for most quaternary- ammonium and accelerated-hydrogen-peroxide formulations this is between 1 and 10 minutes.

4. Step-by-step wet-cleanup procedure

  1. Saturate, do not spray-mist. Apply the disinfectant directly onto the droppings, urine stains, nests and surrounding surface using a low-pressure squirt bottle until the material is visibly wet. Do not use an atomising spray that produces a fine aerosol.
  2. Soak for at least 5 minutes (10 minutes for heavier contamination, or as instructed on the disinfectant label). This is the contact time required to inactivate the virus and to bind the material so it cannot become airborne when handled.
  3. Pick up — do not sweep. Use a paper towel or disposable cloth to lift the soaked material off the surface. Place it directly into a plastic rubbish bag — do not shake, transfer or compress it.
  4. Disinfect the surface a second time. Wipe the cleaned area with a fresh paper towel saturated with the same disinfectant. Allow it to air-dry; do not rinse.
  5. Mop hard floors with the disinfectant solution. Disinfect counters, cabinets, drawers and any surface that may have come into contact with rodents or their excreta.
  6. Soft furnishings. Steam-clean or shampoo upholstered furniture and carpets. Machine-wash bedding, curtains and clothing in hot water (60 °C / 140 °F) with detergent and dry on a hot cycle or in direct sunlight. Items that cannot be washed should be discarded.

5. Dead rodents, traps and nesting material

Spray the carcass and the trap with disinfectant until thoroughly wet, leave for 5 minutes, then place the entire trap and rodent into a sealed plastic bag. Place that bag inside a second bag (double-bagging) and dispose of it according to local regulations — generally with household waste in countries where no specific rule applies, or via biohazard waste channels in occupational settings. Never handle a rodent with bare hands and never burn or bury contaminated material in a way that creates dust or smoke exposure.

6. Removing PPE and personal hygiene

Before leaving the cleaning area, wash your gloved hands with soap and water, then with the disinfectant. Remove the respirator last, holding it by the straps and avoiding contact with the front. Place gloves and respirator in the waste bag, seal it, and wash your bare hands and forearms thoroughly with soap and warm water for at least 20 seconds. Launder the clothing worn during cleanup separately on a hot cycle. Shower as soon as practical.

7. When to call a professional

WHO and national public-health agencies recommend professional remediation for: structures with active or extensive rodent infestation; spaces closed for more than three months; enclosed crawl-spaces and ventilation systems; settings where occupational exposure is recurrent (forestry, grain storage, military, field research). In an outbreak setting, follow the instructions of the responding public-health authority — the cleanup of a documented hantavirus exposure site is a regulated activity in most jurisdictions.

8. Post-exposure: when to seek medical care

If you develop fever, severe muscle aches, headache, fatigue, gastrointestinal symptoms or, later, cough and shortness of breath within 1 to 8 weeks after a possible exposure to rodent excreta, contact a clinician immediately and disclose the exposure. Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS/HCPS) deteriorates rapidly; early access to intensive care, including extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) where available, is the principal determinant of survival.

References

This article is a public-information summary and does not replace local occupational-health regulations or the directives of a competent public-health authority during an outbreak.

WHO Emergency Response Framework

The World Health Organization classifies acute public-health events using its Emergency Response Framework (ERF). It defines three internal severity grades plus the formal PHEIC declaration — there is no "Level 4". The active Andes orthohantavirus cluster is currently tracked at Grade 3.

Grade 1Limited event

Single-country event with minimal public-health consequences. Country office leads response with light WHO support.

Grade 2Moderate event

Single or multi-country event with moderate consequences requiring a moderate WHO response across country and regional levels.

Grade 3Major / complex event
Current

Single or multi-country event with substantial public-health consequences requiring a substantial WHO response across all three levels of the organization.

PHEICPublic Health Emergency of International Concern

Formal declaration by the WHO Director-General under the International Health Regulations (2005) when an event constitutes a risk to other states and may require a coordinated international response.

Source: WHO Emergency Response Framework (2nd ed.) · IHR (2005)

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Hantavirus Variant Reference

Known pathogenic hantavirus species, their reservoir hosts, geographic distribution, and associated mortality rates.

HPS — Hantavirus Pulmonary SyndromeHFRS — Hemorrhagic Fever with Renal SyndromeNE — Nephropathia Epidemica
Andes orthohantavirusANDVActive Outbreak
HPS/HCPS
Mortality
25–40%
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RegionSouth America (Argentina, Chile)
🐀
Reservoir HostOligoryzomys longicaudatus (Long-tailed pygmy rice rat)
Sin Nombre orthohantavirusSNV
HPS
Mortality
35–40%
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RegionNorth America (USA, Canada)
🐀
Reservoir HostPeromyscus maniculatus (Deer mouse)
Hantaan orthohantavirusHTNV
HFRS
Mortality
5–15%
🌍
RegionEast Asia (China, Korea, Russia)
🐀
Reservoir HostApodemus agrarius (Striped field mouse)
Seoul orthohantavirusSEOV
HFRS (mild)
Mortality
1–2%
🌍
RegionWorldwide (urban)
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Reservoir HostRattus norvegicus (Brown rat)
Puumala orthohantavirusPUUV
NE (Nephropathia epidemica)
Mortality
<1%
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RegionEurope (Scandinavia, Central Europe)
🐀
Reservoir HostMyodes glareolus (Bank vole)
Dobrava-Belgrade orthohantavirusDOBV
HFRS
Mortality
5–12%
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RegionBalkans, Southeast Europe
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Reservoir HostApodemus flavicollis (Yellow-necked mouse)
Laguna Negra orthohantavirusLANV
HPS
Mortality
10–20%
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RegionSouth America (Paraguay, Bolivia)
🐀
Reservoir HostCalomys laucha (Small vesper mouse)
Choclo orthohantavirusCHOV
HPS
Mortality
10–25%
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RegionCentral America (Panama)
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Reservoir HostOligoryzomys fulvescens (Fulvous pygmy rice rat)
Black Creek Canal orthohantavirusBCCV
HPS
Mortality
~40%
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RegionNorth America (Florida, USA)
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Reservoir HostSigmodon hispidus (Hispid cotton rat)
Tula orthohantavirusTULV
Mild/Asymptomatic
Mortality
Rare/Low
🌍
RegionEurope
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Reservoir HostMicrotus arvalis (Common vole)

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