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A cruise ship is waiting for help after 3 people died in a suspected outbreak of the rare hantavirus — WPLG Local 10
Health

A cruise ship is waiting for help after 3 people died in a suspected outbreak of the rare hantavirus

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — A cruise ship with nearly 150 people aboard was waiting for help off the coast of Cape Verde in the Atlantic Ocean on Monday after three passengers died and three other people were left seriously ill in a suspected outbreak of the rare hantavirus, according to the World Health Organization and the ship's operator.The MV Hondius, a Dutch ship on a weekslong polar cruise from Argentina to Antarctica and several isolated islands in the South Atlantic, had requested help from local health authorities Sunday after making its way to the island of Cape Verde, off the West Africa coast. But no one has been allowed to disembark, Netherlands-based operator Oceanwide Expeditions said.Cape Verde's Health Ministry said Monday that for now, it will not allow the ship to dock because of public health concerns and that it would stay in open waters close to shore.Hantavirus is a rodent-borne illness spread by contact with rodents or their urine, saliva or droppings. WHO says that while it is rare, hantavirus may spread between people.It was unclear how an outbreak could have started, and the WHO said it was investigating while working to coordinate the evacuation of two sick crew members. Another sick person — a British man evacuated to South Africa on April 27 — is the only one to have tested positive for the virus, authorities said. He is in critical condition and isolated in intensive care, according to local health officials.The body of one of the passengers who died — a German — remains on the ship, according to an Oceanwide Expeditions statement. A 70-year-old Dutch man died onboard April 11, and his 69-year-old wife died later after leaving the ship, officials said.Among the 87 remaining passengers, 17 are Americans, 19 are from the U.K. and 13 from Spain, according to the company. Sixty-one crew members, including the two who are ill, also are onboard.Cruise operator says 2 sick crew members urgently need medical careTwo sick crew members — one British, one Dutch — have respiratory symptoms and need urgent medical care, Oceanwide said in its statement.Cape Verde has sent a medical team of two doctors, a nurse and a laboratory specialist to the ship over three trips, said Dr. Ann Lindstrand, a WHO official in Cape Verde.She told The Associated Press in an interview that they were planning for medical evacuations, in which passengers would be taken from the ship via ambulance to an airport and flown out of Cape Verde.“It’s been very tricky for Cape Verdean authorities,” Lindstrand said. “What they have to deal with is a public health event. And of course, they have been thinking about the protection of the population here.”But Oceanwide said it was still awaiting permission from local authorities in Cape Verde to evacuate passengers and crew members and it would consider moving to one of the Spanish islands of Las Palmas or Tenerife.The Dutch Foreign Ministry said it was also looking into evacuating some people from the ship.WHO said it was working with local authorities and Oceanwide to conduct a “full public health risk assessment.”“Detailed investigations are ongoing, including further laboratory testing, and epidemiological investigations,” WHO said. “Medical care and support are being provided to passengers and crew.”WHO said that while only one case was confirmed through tests, the other five cases — the three deaths and two ill crew members — were suspected to be hantavirus.Lindstrand told AP there was a possible new case on the ship, in a person showing mild fever symptoms, but health workers were still assessing.The cruise started in ArgentinaThe ship left Ushuaia in southern Argentina on April 1, according to Argentine provincial authorities, for its cruise to Antarctica, the Falkland Islands, South Georgia and other isolated islands in the South Atlantic.While Oceanwide Expeditions didn’t specify this trip's itinerary, the company advertises 33-night or 43-night “Atlantic Odyssey” cruises on the Hondius.The ship has 80 cabins and a capacity of 170 passengers, and it typically travels with about 70 crew members, including a doctor, the company said.The Dutch man was the first victim, and he presented with fever, headache, abdominal pain and diarrhea, officials said. His body was taken off the vessel nearly two weeks later on the British territory of Saint Helena, some 1,200 miles (1,900 kilometers) off the African coast, and was awaiting repatriation.His 69-year-old wife was transferred to South Africa at the same time but collapsed at a Johannesburg airport and died at a hospital, the South African Department of Health said.The ship then sailed on to Ascension Island, an isolated Atlantic outpost about 800 miles (1,300 kilometers) to the north, where the sick British man was taken off the ship and evacuated to South Africa on April 27. He later tested positive for hantavirus.South African officials have started contact tracing but say there's no need to panicThere was no information from authorities on the possible source of the suspected outbreak. A previous hantavirus outbreak in southern Argentina in 2019 killed at least nine people. It prompted a judge to order dozens of residents of a remote town to stay in their homes for 30 days to halt the spread.South Africa’s National Institute for Communicable Diseases was conducting contact tracing to identify whether people were exposed to infected cruise ship passengers. The 69-year-old woman who died was trying to catch a flight home to the Netherlands at Johannesburg’s main international airport, one of the busiest in Africa, when she collapsed.But the health department urged people not to panic, saying WHO was “coordinating a multicountry response with all affected islands and countries to contain further spread of the disease.”Hantavirus has no specific treatment or cure, but early medical attention can increase the chance of survival.Hantaviruses cause two serious syndromes, according to the U.S. Centers

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Technology

New Mexico seeks child safety restrictions on Meta apps and algorithms in trial's 2nd phase

In Santa Fe, N.M., state prosecutors are pursuing significant changes to Meta's social media platforms, including Instagram, to enhance child safety during the second phase of a landmark trial. Opening statements commenced on Monday in this three-week bench trial, which will determine if Meta's platforms constitute a public nuisance under state law. In the first phase, jurors imposed $375 million in civil penalties against Meta for knowingly harming children's mental health and concealing information regarding child sexual exploitation on its platforms.

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Astronomers believe they've detected an atmosphere around a tiny, icy world beyond Pluto — WPLG Local 10
HealthWPLG Local 10May 4

Astronomers believe they've detected an atmosphere around a tiny, icy world beyond Pluto

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — A new study suggests that a tiny, icy world beyond Pluto harbors a thin, delicate atmosphere that may have been created by volcanic eruptions or a comet strike.Just 300 miles (500 kilometers) or so across, this mini Pluto is thought to be the solar system's smallest object yet with a clearly detected global atmosphere bound by gravity, said lead researcher Ko Arimatsu of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan.“This is an amazing development, but it sorely needs independent verification. The implications are profound if verified,” said Southwest Research Institute's Alan Stern, the lead scientist behind NASA's New Horizons mission to Pluto and beyond. He was not involved in the study.The finding offers fresh insight into our solar system’s farthest, coldest objects in a region known as the Kuiper Belt. Researchers used three telescopes in Japan to observe the object in 2024 as it passed in front of a background star, briefly dimming the starlight.“It changes our view of small worlds in the solar system, not only beyond Neptune,” Arimatsu said in an email. Finding an atmosphere around such a small object was “genuinely surprising," he added, and challenges “the conventional view that atmospheres are limited to large planets, dwarf planets and some large moons.”This so-called minor planet — formally known as (612533) 2002 XV93 — is considered a plutino, circling the sun twice in the time it takes Neptune to complete three solar orbits. At the time of the study, it was more than 3.4 billion miles (5.5 billion kilometers) away, farther than even Pluto, the only other object in the Kuiper Belt with an observed atmosphere.This cosmic iceball’s atmosphere is believed to be 5 million to 10 million times thinner than Earth’s protective atmosphere, according to the the study appearing Monday in the journal Nature Astronomy.It’s 50 to 100 times thinner than even Pluto’s tenuous atmosphere. The likeliest atmospheric chemicals are methane, nitrogen or carbon monoxide, any of which could reproduce the observed dimming as the object passed before the star, according to Arimatsu.Further observations, especially by NASA’s Webb Space Telescope, could verify the makeup of the atmosphere, according to Arimatsu.“That is why future monitoring is so important," he said. "If the atmosphere fades over the next several years, that would support an impact origin. If it persists, or varies seasonally, that would point more toward ongoing internal gas supply” from ice volcanoes.___The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

Miami-Dade Sheriff's Office sergeant cleared in 2025 shootout that killed armed man — NBC 6 South Florida
HealthNBC 6 South FloridaMay 4

Miami-Dade Sheriff's Office sergeant cleared in 2025 shootout that killed armed man

Caught on Camera Miami-Dade Sheriff's Office sergeant cleared in 2025 shootout that killed armed man Sgt. Gilberto Crespo was legally justified in the Sept. 16, 2025 shootout that killed 44-year-old Jose Pineda Jr., according to an April 30 Miami-Dade State Attorney's Office closeout memo obtained by NBC6 on Monday. By NBC6 • Published 39 seconds ago • Updated 30 seconds ago BOOKMARKER NBC Universal, Inc. Dramatic new body camera video from the Miami-Dade Sheriff’s Office shows a shootout involving a sergeant and an armed suspect who was killed back in September. NBC6’s Ari Odzer reports A Miami-Dade Sheriff's Office sergeant has been cleared in a shootout last year with an armed suspect who was killed in the gunfire that was caught on camera. Sgt. Gilberto Crespo was legally justified in the Sept. 16, 2025 shootout that killed 44-year-old Jose Pineda Jr., according to an April 30 Miami-Dade State Attorney's Office closeout memo obtained by NBC6 on Monday. Watch NBC6 free wherever you are   WATCH HERE The incident began when Miami-Dade Sheriff's Office officials said they received a 911 call about a man waving a gun at people outside of Davis Grocery in the 21600 block of Southwest 120th Avenue. "There's a guy in a Honda…he's pulling a gun out on everybody, please send the police, hurry up now," the person says in the call, also released by the sheriff's office. Florida Department of CorrectionsFlorida Department of CorrectionsJose Pineda Jr. According to the closeout memo, witnesses said Pineda was acting erratically, saying he was "ready for anything" and claiming his baby momma had killed their baby and he was "looking for something." Body camera footage released by the sheriff's office showed Crespo arrive and tell Pineda, who was in the van, to show his hands, but Pineda responded that he didn't have any hands. Local Airlines 24 minutes ago Spirit Airlines doomed by high fuel prices due to ‘recent geopolitical events,' court docs state Hialeah 49 minutes ago Hialeah man stabbed another man with kitchen knife in random attack, cops say Moments later, the video shows a barrage of bullets being fired as the sergeant and Pineda both opened fire. Crespo took cover behind a pickup truck then fired a few more shots and got on his radio. "Shots fired, shots fired!" he yells. "Watch for crossfire, he's armed!" A second deputy responds as Pineda got out of the van and ended up on the ground, injured, with his gun laying next to him, the video showed. The gun is kicked away as Pineda is placed in handcuffs. He was taken to a local hospital where he died from his injuries. Crespo wasn't injured but photos released by the sheriff's office showed the sergeant's vehicle was struck by gunfire and the closeout memo said a tire on his vehicle became flat from one of the rounds. Miami-Dade Sheriff's OfficeMiami-Dade Sheriff's OfficeA Miami-Dade Sheriff's Office vehicle was damaged in a shootout on Sept. 16, 2025. Another photo showed Pineda's gun that was recovered at the scene. Miami-Dade Sheriff's OfficeMiami-Dade Sheriff's Office Investigators determined from the footage that Pineda fired first and that 34 shots were fired, including 11 from Pineda and 23 from Crespo, the closeout memo said. "In this case, the reported behavior to police and Pineda Jr.'s actions upon Sergeant Crespo's arrival constituted a clear danger," the memo said. "Therefore, based on a review of the law and evidence, Sergeant Crespo's use of deadly force was legally justified." This article tagged under: Caught on CameraMiami-Dade County