
New cases of rare rodent disease are increasing... experts warn it could be the next pandemic
Health officials confirmed this week that an employee at Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona had been exposed to hantavirus, a respiratory illness that spreads by inhaling airborne particles released by rodent droppings.
The disease, which killed Gene Hackman's wife Betsy Arakawa, is so rare in the US that only one or two people die every year, and there have only been around 1,000 cases in the past three decades.
These cases are mostly among farmers, hikers and campers, and homeless populations.
However, the virus has now been detected in five Arizona residents and four people in Nevada this year alone, suggesting cases could be on the rise. In 2024, there were seven confirmed cases and four deaths.
The unnamed employee was reportedly exposed to hantavirus while working in the camp's mule pens, according to a Grand Canyon spokesperson.
And earlier this year, three people in remote Mammoth Lakes, California, died of hantavirus despite not being 'engaged in activities typically associated with exposure,' according to state health officials.
Though the park employee is expected to make a full recovery, hantavirus can lead to hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS), which causes the lungs to fill with fluid and kills up to 50 percent of patients.
To reduce risk of exposure, health officials recommend airing out spaces where mice droppings could be, avoid sweeping droppings, use disinfectant and wipe up debris and wear gloves and a mask.
Hantaviruses are a group of viruses found worldwide that are spread to people when they inhale aerosolized fecal matter, urine, or saliva from infected rodents.
The disease was first identified in South Korea in 1978 when researchers isolated it from a field mouse. However, it only affects about 40 to 50 Americans each year, mostly in the southwest.
Between 1993 and 2022, 864 cases have been confirmed, the latest available CDC data shows.
Worldwide, there are about 150,000 to 200,000 cases per year, most of which are in China.
The rarity of hantavirus in the US is partly because the country has fewer rodent species that the illness can circulate amongst, compared to Asia and Europe, where multiple rodent species act as hosts.
In the US, deer mice are the most common carriers.
David Quammen, a science writer whose book predicted the Covid-19 pandemic, previously told DailyMail.com an increase in hantaviruses cases could have global implications.
He said: '[Hantaviruses] were known from Korea originally, and then they turned up in the Four Corners area of the US back in 1992 and they started killing people.
'It wasn't surprising to find Hantaviruses in the US, as well as in Korea because, again, it's a global group of viruses.'
Virginia Tech researchers recently found that while deer mice are still the primary reservoir for hantaviruses in North America, the virus is now circulating more widely than previously thought, with antibodies detected in six additional rodent species where they had not been documented before.
Seventy-nine percent of positive blood samples they tested came from deer mice species, but researchers also found that other rodent species had a higher percentage of hantavirus infections than deer mice – between 4.3 and five percent.
The vast majority of human cases are traced back to two or three key deer mouse species, but the study's findings reveal that the virus is more flexible than scientists once thought, broadening what they know about its basic biology.
Virginia had the highest infection rate among rodents, with nearly eight percent of samples testing positive for hantavirus – four times the national average of around two percent.
Colorado had the second-highest infection rate, followed by Texas, both known risk regions for the virus, with average positive blood samples more than twice as high as the national average.
Hantavirus symptoms typically show up within one to eight weeks of exposure to infected rodents and include fatigue, fever, muscle aches, headache, dizziness, chills and abdominal or digestive issues.
After four to 10 days of the early symptoms, patients may experience shortness of breath, chest tightness and fluid in the lungs.
There is no specific treatment for hantavirus, and patients are instead given supportive therapies like rest, hydration, and breathing support.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
10 minutes ago
- Reuters
US CDC cuts experts out of panels that develop vaccine policy, Bloomberg reports
July 31 (Reuters) - The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told physician groups, public health professionals and infectious disease experts that they will no longer be invited to help review vaccine data and develop recommendations, Bloomberg News reported on Thursday.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
MIMI SPENCER invented the 5:2 Fast diet with Dr Michael Mosley. Now she shares food routine that means she's happier in her own body than ever at 57... and a dark warning on weight-loss jabs
When I wrote about intermittent fasting in The Fast Diet with the late Michael Mosley in 2012, we often stated, sagely and with good reason, that weight-loss took effort, commitment, focus and loads of boring, difficult things that no one really wanted to do. There is no silver bullet, we said, no magic wand.


The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
Trump revives presidential fitness test – will US students run a mile?
Donald Trump announced on Thursday that he is re-establishing the presidential fitness test, a way of assessing the fitness level of American students. The test was administered in public middle and high schools in the United States from 1966 to 2013, when the Obama administration replaced it with the presidential youth fitness program – a similar physical assessment program, but with more focus on health education. The health secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr – vaccine skeptic and key figure in the 'Make America Healthy Again' movement – will be in charge of administering the test. In a statement reported by the AP, the White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, said the president 'wants to ensure America's future generations are strong, healthy, and successful' and that young Americans 'have the opportunity to emphasize health, active lifestyles – creating a culture of strength and excellence for years to come'. Below, what you need to know about the presidential fitness test. Initiated by Dwight D Eisenhower in 1956, the test changed over the years, but generally consisted of five parts: a one-mile run, a shuttle run (moving as quickly as possible back and forth between two points), pull-ups or push-ups, sit-ups and the sit-and-reach (sitting on the ground with your legs outstretched and seeing how far down your legs your hands can reach). According to the Harvard Health blog, the aim of the test was to 'assess cardiovascular fitness, upper-body and core strength, endurance, flexibility, and agility'. The test derives from the Kraus-Weber test for muscular fitness, an assessment developed by Dr Hans Kraus and Dr Sonja Weber. The test was administered to thousands of students across the US and Europe. Researchers found that European students performed significantly better than their American counterparts: 59.7% of US students failed at least one of the test's six exercises, compared with only 8.7% of European students. According to a 1955 Sports Illustrated article, when Kraus presented his findings at the White House, President Eisenhower declared the problem 'a serious one'. The president seemed less worried about children's health and wellbeing than he did their combat preparedness. According to the Department of Health and Human Service's 50th anniversary booklet about the test, 'his chief concern seemed to be the vulnerability to the red army'. 'Our growing softness, our increasing lack of physical fitness, is a menace to our security,' Eisenhower said. It doesn't seem so. A 2025 report in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that from 2007 to 2023, trends had 'significantly worsened' for 'child mortality; chronic physical, developmental and mental health conditions; obesity; sleep health; early puberty; limitations in activity; and physical and emotional symptoms'. And when it comes to competition with Europe, the US is faring even worse than it did before. Dr Christopher Forrest, one of the study's authors, told NPR that back in the 1960s, 'the chance that a child was going to die in the United States was the same as European nations'. But from 2010 to 2023, 'kids in the United States were 80% more likely to die', than those in Europe.