Saturday, June 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Ontario now testing asymptomatic people for hantavirus; low-risk cases to stop isolating if negative

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 May, 2026 12:16 PM
  • Ontario now testing asymptomatic people for hantavirus; low-risk cases to stop isolating if negative

Ontario’s ministry of health said it is now testing asymptomatic people with connections to a hantavirus-stricken cruise, a shift from government remarks made earlier this week, as health officials around the world grapple with the role of testing in the current effort to contain spread of the rodent-borne illness.

The province said the three "high-risk" travellers — two who were on the cruise and one who was on the same flight as a person who has since died of hantavirus — will stay in strict isolation regardless of their result.

However, a ministry spokesperson said the seven “low-risk” contacts can stop their recommended 45-day isolation if they test negative, while daily public health monitoring will continue.

“As an added precaution, testing has been offered to all identified contacts, even in the absence of symptoms, to further reduce any potential risk and to support early detection,” a spokesperson for Sylvia Jones, Ontario's health minister, said Friday.

Nine people in Canada have been classified as "high-risk contacts" and are isolating in Ontario, Alberta and British Columbia, while 26 others have been deemed "low risk."

Public health officials have described "low-risk" contacts as air passengers who were on the same flight as someone with hantavirus, but weren't in close proximity to them.

The question of whether to test asymptomatic people has been raised several times over the past week, complicated by the long incubation period of the virus, and potential for symptoms to show up weeks after exposure.

Earlier this week, Jones said the guidance from the province's top doctor was that it wasn't appropriate to test people showing no symptoms at the time.

Dr. Joss Reimer, Canada's chief public health officer, also suggested testing asymptomatic people might give a false sense of security.

“If somebody is perhaps testing negative, but later could go on to develop hantavirus, I don't want that individual to be taking their isolation requirements less seriously. So that's the balance that we're trying to strike in getting as much information as we can and is useful without giving people a false reassurance that might lead to unnecessary exposures,” Reimer said at a press briefing Friday.

Canada has two kinds of hantavirus tests: one that detects antibodies in the blood, and a PCR test, which finds particles of the virus itself.

The World Health Organization said its international hantavirus case count is 10, as the previous tally had an inconclusive test in the U.S. that’s since been confirmed as negative.

Three people have died. No additional deaths have been recorded since May 2.

More cases may be reported internationally in the coming days, since it can take up to six weeks to develop symptoms, said Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO's director of health emergency alert and response operations.

“This does not mean the outbreak is expanding. It shows that the control measures are working, that laboratory testing is ongoing, and that people are being cared for with support from their governments.”

On Friday, WHO held an emergency scientific consultation on Andes virus to discuss the latest research on transmission, diagnosis, treatment and vaccination.

Van Kerkhove said WHO is also working to better understand how this outbreak began and spread.

"The story of this outbreak, I think will be studied for years and years."

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo

MORE National ARTICLES

Familiar fate for Abbotsford as floodwaters gush over U.S. border into B.C. again

Familiar fate for Abbotsford as floodwaters gush over U.S. border into B.C. again
Standing near a rail line next to the U.S. border, Abbotsford, B.C., resident Robbie Friesen said the ground under his feet was dry about 30 minutes earlier.

Familiar fate for Abbotsford as floodwaters gush over U.S. border into B.C. again

Libraries say budget proposal to end shipping program would be 'catastrophic'

Libraries say budget proposal to end shipping program would be 'catastrophic'
Libraries across Canada say a proposed change in the federal budget bill would end their ability to ship books at reduced rates, threatening interlibrary loan programs and possibly forcing the closure of rural facilities.

Libraries say budget proposal to end shipping program would be 'catastrophic'

Small group of Conservatives frustrated with Poilievre: government House leader

Small group of Conservatives frustrated with Poilievre: government House leader
Government House leader Steven MacKinnon says there are more Conservatives who are "frustrated" with the political direction being taken by their party.

Small group of Conservatives frustrated with Poilievre: government House leader

Fraser Valley floodwaters could peak today, but B.C. braces for more rain on way

Fraser Valley floodwaters could peak today, but B.C. braces for more rain on way
More rain is in store for the flood-drenched Fraser Valley in British Columbia, where hundreds of properties have been evacuated.

Fraser Valley floodwaters could peak today, but B.C. braces for more rain on way

Companies fined over fatal crane accident at Vancouver's Oakridge Park

Companies fined over fatal crane accident at Vancouver's Oakridge Park
More than $1.3 million in fines have been levied against two companies involved in a series of B.C. crane accidents, including an incident last year at Vancouver's Oakridge Park development where a worker was killed by material that fell 26 storeys.

Companies fined over fatal crane accident at Vancouver's Oakridge Park

Floodwaters rising in B.C.'s Fraser Valley, pushing more people out

Floodwaters rising in B.C.'s Fraser Valley, pushing more people out
Floodwaters pushing in from Washington state are forcing more people from their properties in Abbotsford, B.C. 

Floodwaters rising in B.C.'s Fraser Valley, pushing more people out