Hantavirus in Children — How Common, How Severe, and What Parents Should Watch For
Hantavirus is rarer in children than adults but can still occur. We summarise pediatric case-series, age-stratified outcomes, what symptoms to watch for in young children who may not communicate clearly, and when to seek emergency care.
Most published hantavirus case data covers adults. If you are a parent worried about a child after a possible exposure — or after the 2026 MV Hondius outbreak coverage — you may struggle to find pediatric-specific guidance. This article summarises what the published case-series actually say about hantavirus in children, what symptoms to watch for, and when to bring a child to the emergency room.
Hantavirus disease is uncommon in children under 15, but when it occurs the case fatality rate is similar to adults; younger children may present with vaguer symptoms, so any unexplained fever and breathing trouble after possible rodent or close-contact exposure warrants urgent medical evaluation.
How common is hantavirus in kids?
Pediatric hantavirus is rarer than adult disease. CDC US surveillance shows children under 15 represent roughly 6–10% of confirmed hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) cases historically. Argentine and Chilean Andes virus surveillance shows similar proportions — children and adolescents are a clear minority, but they are present.
The reasons for the lower pediatric incidence are debated:
- Children spend less time in the high-risk environments (cleaning rodent-infested cabins, working in agriculture)
- Some pediatric infections may be milder and resolve without ever being recognised or PCR-confirmed
- A few researchers have proposed age-related immune differences but evidence is limited
What symptoms should parents watch for?
The classic adult HPS picture (fever → muscle aches → breathlessness) applies to school-age children and adolescents. In younger children (under 5) presentation is often more subtle and may include:
- Persistent fever without obvious cause (over 38.5 °C lasting beyond a typical viral illness window)
- Unusual lethargy or refusal to play — the most consistently reported early sign in toddlers
- Decreased oral intake and reduced urine output
- Rapid breathing or visible breathing effort — chest retraction, nasal flaring
- Pale or grey skin colour, particularly around the mouth
- Vomiting and abdominal pain are common in pediatric presentation and may dominate the early picture
When to go to the emergency room
If your child has had possible rodent or close-contact exposure within the last 6 weeks (the standard hantavirus monitoring window) and shows any of the following, go directly to an emergency department and mention the exposure on arrival:
- Difficulty breathing or unusually rapid breathing
- Skin colour change (pale, grey, bluish lips/nailbeds)
- Lethargy that is harder than usual to rouse
- Persistent vomiting or refusal to drink for more than 12 hours
- High fever with low blood pressure (clammy skin, weak pulse)
The single most important thing you can do at the ER is tell the triage nurse about the possible exposure. Hantavirus is rare enough that without that history it may not be on the immediate diagnostic list. Early ICU admission is the strongest predictor of pediatric survival.
Outcomes
Pediatric HPS case fatality is roughly comparable to adults — 25–40% in published Argentine and Chilean series. Survivors generally recover without long-term sequelae after the acute illness, though fitness and exercise tolerance may take months to fully return.
The MV Hondius context
Expedition cruise demographics typically skew adult; no pediatric cases have been confirmed in the 2026 MV Hondius cluster at time of writing. We will update if that changes.
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