When Stephen Kornfeld set sail aboard the MV Hondius in early April, his grand plan for the cruise was so as to add as many new species as attainable to his birding record. A medical oncologist based mostly in Bend, Oregon, Kornfeld can be an avid birder—second on eBird’s famend rankings of birders worldwide—and the ship would go to a number of distant islands, the place he may spot a few of the globe’s most obscure avians. However final week, Kornfeld’s journey took an sudden twist: He stepped in to care for 3 individuals considered sick with hantavirus, a extreme respiratory pathogen that may kill roughly half of the individuals it infects. Kornfeld was, and nonetheless is, “a passenger on this boat,” he instructed me. “However I grew to become the physician on this boat.”
For the reason that MV Hondius departed, at the least eight individuals have come down with suspected or confirmed instances of hantavirus; three have died. Individuals sometimes get contaminated by the virus by way of the aerosolized feces or different bodily secretions of contaminated rodents. However the World Well being Group has confirmed that this hantavirus is a species referred to as Andes virus, which has typically unfold individual to individual, below circumstances of shut and extended contact—comparable to, say, on a cruise ship with about 150 individuals on board.
A month in the past, because the cruise departed from Argentina, Kornfeld and the opposite passengers—amongst them, dozens of birders—had been buzzing concerning the whales, seals, and dolphins they’d noticed cavorting within the South Atlantic Ocean, and gossiping concerning the adventures forward. When a 70-year-old Dutch man, one of many birders, died aboard on April 11, Kornfeld and the others had been shaken however thought-about the incident a freak accident, with no implications for anybody else on board. However then, roughly two weeks later, the Dutch man’s spouse fell sick, too, dying shortly after she was taken off the ship. After one other birder, a British man, grew feverish and commenced struggling to breathe, he was evacuated to a South African ICU, the place he stays in care.
By the top of April, three different individuals on board had began to really feel fairly sick—together with two crew members, amongst them the ship’s physician, who had been assessing the opposite sufferers. Many individuals on the ship’s small crew had been educated to supply some extent of medical help. However there was no official backup doctor, Kornfeld mentioned, and when the crew began asking who among the many passengers had a medical background, few had been in a position to assist.
Feeling the urgency of the state of affairs, Kornfeld stepped in. He formally started aiding the crew on Might 1—final Friday—at first assuming that the physician would want support for only a day or two whereas he recovered from a presumably short-lived, flu-like sickness. However the state of affairs quickly started to accentuate. The following day, the ailing passenger, a German girl, died; at about the identical time, check outcomes from sick passengers who had left the cruise had been starting to trickle again—sending the phrase hantavirus surging via the ship. The ship’s physician was so stricken with signs that he needed to confine himself to his quarters. A lethal infectious illness was seemingly on board, and “the ship’s physician was not going to have the ability to operate because the ship’s physician,” Kornfeld mentioned. The cruise’s foremost medical duties now, by default, fell to him.
Kornfeld had retired from his full-time oncology job greater than a decade in the past, though he nonetheless picks up shifts right here and there at a number of of Oregon’s rural hospitals. Now he was being thrust right into a nerve-racking, life-or-death state of affairs, and caring for sick and doubtlessly infectious sufferers whereas attempting to speak with the remainder of the passengers on board, all with very restricted assets. A number of members of the crew assisted him the place they may. However though the ship had a medical facility of types, Kornfeld instructed me he discovered little greater than the provides {that a} cruise physician would want to take care of routine sickness at sea: some anti-inflammatory medication, just a few over-the-counter medicines, a fleet of oxygen tanks—unsurprisingly, not the kinds of chest scanners or ventilators that would come in useful for diagnosing and managing extreme respiratory sickness. The ship did have loads of surgical masks, although, plus some N95 respirators. Kornfeld strapped one on every day that he was with the sick, together with goggles, an apron, and gloves.
Kornfeld’s new position on the boat put him at one of many central nodes of a world effort to avoid wasting these sufferers—and, finally, comprise the outbreak. In between checking on his sufferers, he juggled telephone calls, emails, and WhatsApp messages from medical and analysis professionals from a number of teams, he instructed me, together with the WHO and Oceanwide Expeditions, the corporate operating the cruise. Among the many consultants he related with had been a few of the world’s foremost hantavirus researchers; no matter questions he had, he received the solutions to. (When reached for remark, the WHO pointed me to a Thursday press convention, however declined to touch upon Kornfeld particularly. Oceanwide declined to touch upon “particular person tales” from the MV Hondius, as a substitute pointing me to its press releases on the outbreak.)
In some methods, the seemingly presence of hantavirus made the state of affairs easier. “In medication, sick is sick,” Kornfeld mentioned. Hantavirus doesn’t have a particular remedy or therapy; serving to those that had been presumably contaminated wasn’t a matter of administering a specific drug however of monitoring, stopping deterioration, and triaging another passengers or crew who got here to him with worrying signs.
After the German passenger died, the ship docked off the shore of Cabo Verde to await the crew members’ medical evacuation. Docs from the island got here on board to evaluate the sufferers however didn’t keep for lengthy. Kornfeld continued to take care of his sufferers virtually across the clock: On Tuesday, he instructed me, he spent almost 18 hours anxiously monitoring their fluid standing and oxygen ranges, hoping that their coronary heart and lungs wouldn’t fail; that evening, he estimates he cobbled collectively three hours of sleep.
By then, Kornfeld had additionally grow to be a key supply of intel for his fellow passengers. They wished to know the dangers of the state of affairs; they wished him to inform them how involved to be about diarrhea, a again ache, an errant cough—might a few of it imply that that they had the virus too? Some additionally approached him with worries about their medicines, which had been operating dangerously low, conversing with him via masks between his shifts caring for sufferers. Ultimately, he grew to become identified by many across the boat as “Physician Steve.”
With hantavirus now a transparent and current risk, the ship’s crew took motion, too, Peter Marsh, one of many ship’s passengers and birders, instructed me—“attempting to comprise the state of affairs and maintain the remainder of us protected.” They suggested masking and distancing, and requested passengers to remain of their cabin as a lot as they may once they weren’t fastidiously socializing on the out of doors deck; the crew doubled down on sanitization procedures all throughout the boat. Basically, “we began adopting the earlier COVID protocol,” Kenneth Petersen, one other bird-watcher colleague of Kornfeld’s on the ship, instructed me. Kornfeld’s presence was particularly reassuring to the ship’s many birders, amongst whom the physician was one thing of a star for his species-spotting prowess, Marsh, who has identified Kornfeld for greater than a decade, instructed me: “When he gave medical recommendation, they had been very receptive.”
The 2 sick crew members had been evacuated on Wednesday, together with—out of an abundance of warning—the touring companion of the feminine passenger who died aboard final week. Within the meantime, nobody else has come to Kornfeld with regarding signs, he instructed me. Total, the temper aboard has remained comparatively optimistic, the passengers I spoke with mentioned: Many individuals are nonetheless (fastidiously) collaborating in morning out of doors train lessons, and within the afternoons, Kornfeld nonetheless spots a little bit of dancing across the deck as individuals take pleasure in their drinks. And so they’ve proven up in no matter methods they’ll for each other. At the same time as crew members ailed, their colleagues handed them phrases of encouragement via their closed cabin doorways; once they had been medically evacuated, passengers signed get-well playing cards.
The ship left Cabo Verde yesterday and is predicted to dock within the Canary Islands this weekend. Now aboard are officers from the WHO and Europe’s CDC, plus two infectious-disease medical doctors from the Netherlands, Maria Van Kerkhove, the performing director of epidemic and pandemic administration on the WHO, instructed me. They may watch and wait to see if others fall sick. The following large hurdle might be getting everybody else residence, as officers assess the boat and its passengers, and international locations with nationals aboard weigh how one can deal with their return.
Kornfeld expects to be monitored intently within the coming days, given how a lot time he spent with sick sufferers. He instructed me that he’s taken at the least some consolation in figuring out that this species of the virus appeared to require intense, extended publicity to do harm, and that he took the right precautions; as a doctor, a part of his constitution is to assist others, even at his personal private danger. Now “if I’m not useful anymore, I’m glad to only fade again and grow to be a passenger once more,” he mentioned. Though this journey could also be extra remembered for its hantavirus troubles, Kornfeld instructed me his preliminary birding ambitions weren’t for naught. He noticed roughly two dozen new species on the weekslong journey. And though the boat by no means landed on Cabo Verde, he nonetheless noticed one of many birds he had hoped to see there, flying over the island. His most up-to-date eBird log is marked Might 3, 2026: a Cape Verde swift.
