News

The illness often begins with flu-like symptoms like fever, fatigue and muscle aches and can rapidly progress to severe ...
In late June, a Grand Canyon National Park concessions employee contracted hantavirus, a rare but often fatal rodent-borne ...
However, the positive news is that hantavirus has never spread from person to person in North America. “Person-to-person ...
A park employee at the Grand Canyon was exposed to hantavirus, and a separate case of exposure to rabies in the park has also been confirmed.
Two separate cases of zoonotic diseases, hantavirus and rabies, were confirmed at Grand Canyon National Park. A park employee ...
In addition, the full-length genome sequence of Ulleung virus was identified for the first time in the world using ...
Hantavirus is primarily spread by deer mice, which are prevalent in the Grand Canyon area. The virus can cause a host of ...
Grand Canyon officials say a concessions employee got sick with hantavirus and two people came into contact with a ...
The Grand Canyon reports a hantavirus case in an employee and a positive rabies test in a bat, prompting health precautions.
GRAND CANYON VILLAGE, Ariz. — Cases of two zoonotic diseases, rabies and Hantavirus, have been reported at the Grand Canyon.
Officials with the National Park Service say two separate zoonotic disease were reported at the Grand Canyon, and one of them ...
Hantavirus is a rare but potentially fatal disease spread by infected rodent droppings. Arakawa tested negative for COVID-19 and the flu and showed no signs of trauma, the autopsy report said.