site banner

Transnational Thursday for May 7, 2026

Transnational Thursday is a thread for people to discuss international news, foreign policy or international relations history. Feel free as well to drop in with coverage of countries you’re interested in, talk about ongoing dynamics like the wars in Israel or Ukraine, or even just whatever you’re reading.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

What are the odds the ongoing Andes hantavirus outbreak turns into another global pandemic just six years after Covid?

A KLM flight attendant has been hospitalized with suspected hantavirus infection. That's one of the best jobs for spreading a virus with a very long asymptomatic incubation period.

All this hantavirus stuff is strange. When I first heard of it 20+ years ago (I think a death on the Navajo Nation in NM or something), it was clear that it took close inhalation from an immense amount of mouse fecal material (like being in a filthy crawl space without a ventilator mask for hours). Now between Hackman's wife and the cruise ship outbreak, that no longer seems to be the case.

edit--I was off by 10ish years, it was the 1993 outbreak I remembered.

Their initial recommendation was to name the pathogen Muerto Canyon virus, after an involved area on the Navajo Reservation. The Navajo people reacted strongly against any further association with the disease that had led to so much initial prejudice, and tribal elders appealed to officials to reconsider. Ultimately, the new agent was officially named Sin Nombre virus (virus with no name).

A deadly new virus came out of a place called Cañon del Muerto. C'mon man.

It's a different one. Still an American type, but from what I've read it looks like this specific hantavirus can be transmitted from person to person. Not as easily as common cold or flu, but still.

I'm also reading that close prolonged contact is typical, not just droplets across a conversation.