Officials investigating possible hantavirus case in San Quentin prison with inmates, staff monitored for symptoms

This is read by an automated voice.Please report any issues or inconsistencies here.
Officials are investigating a potential case of hantavirus, a rare but deadly disease that attacks the lungs, in an inmate at the San Quentin Rehabilitation Center in Marin County.The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, which manages the state’s prison system, “is waiting for more lab test results for an inmate with symptoms,” Kyle Buis, spokesperson for the California Correctional Health Care Services, told The Mercury News on Thursday.
The Times reached out to the San Quentin Rehabilitation Center but did not receive a response before publication.The prison is designed to hold more than 3,000 individuals and it currently houses low- and medium-security inmates, according to the CDCR.
Officials have decontaminated the facility’s inmate housing as a precaution and medical staff are monitoring prisoners and staff for possible symptoms, The Mercury News reported.California Betsy Arakawa died from hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, a rare rodent-spread disease with a mortality rate up to 50% in the American Southwest, officials said.Though hantavirus cases are rare, several have been making headlines of late.Five California residents were exposed to a strain of the hantavirus, known as Andes virus, that spread on a Dutch cruise ship and killed three people.
Typically, hantavirus spreads by inhaling particles contaminated with the urine, feces or saliva of wild rodents.The Andes virus, that was spread on the cruise ship, is a strain of the hantavirus that’s spread from human to human.
There have been 890 laboratory-confirmed cases of hantavirus disease reported in the United States since surveillance began in 1993, according to the most recent data from the U.S.Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.The data suggest that contracting hantavirus is rare, said Dr.
Afif El-Hasan, a member of the American Lung Assn.’s national board of directors.“That...