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About HantavirusMap
A signal-based view on hantavirus activity. Informational, transparent, never authoritative.
How HantavirusMap works
We aggregate
WHO API, ProMED RSS, GDELT, CDC, ECDC, PAHO and regional health agencies — continuously.
AI analyses
Risk scoring, signal summaries, country reports — refreshed weekly per country.
You stay informed
Live map, weekly digest, real-time alerts on official signals — all in one place.
What you see on the map
HantavirusMap combines three independent data layers:
- Endemic zones — regions where hantavirus is known to circulate based on long-term epidemiology.
- Historical cases — reported case counts per region. Circle size scales with the number of cases.
- Active alerts — recent outbreak signals from official health bulletins and curated news.
Sources
- CDC NNDSS — weekly hantavirus reports across US states.
- ECDC — annual surveillance for European countries.
- PAHO — Latin American case counts.
- WHO Disease Outbreak News (DON) — official outbreak bulletins.
- ProMED — community-curated outbreak reports.
- GDELT + curated news — global media signals, deduplicated and source-tagged.
Each item links back to its primary source. We prefer incomplete transparency over false precision: when data is sparse we show it explicitly rather than hiding it.
What it is not
- Not a medical service or diagnosis tool.
- Not affiliated with WHO, CDC, ECDC or any official authority.
- Not a substitute for official public health authorities.
Limitations
- Public surveillance lags by days, weeks or months.
- Reporting coverage varies between countries.
- Endemic zone polygons follow national borders and don't reflect within-country variation.
Looking for medical background? See About hantavirus and Symptoms.
HantavirusMap aggregates publicly available signals for informational purposes only. Not medical advice. Not affiliated with WHO, CDC, or ECDC.