🇵🇸Hantavirus in State of Palestine
As of 2026-05-14, no active hantavirus signals are being reported in State of Palestine. This page tracks live hantavirus surveillance for State of Palestine and will update automatically as new reports appear in open news sources.
Key facts · State of Palestine
- Country
- State of Palestine (PS)
- Region
- the Middle East
- Predominant syndrome
- Hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) (ICD-10 A98.5)
- Principal reservoir
- Apodemus and Myodes voles in forested zones, supplemented by Rattus species in port cities
- Recent signal count
- 0 (no current signals)
- Latest source
- —
Hantavirus context · State of Palestine
State of Palestine sits in the Middle East, where hantavirus infection most often takes the form of Dobrava-Belgrade and Puumala-related cases reported from the Black Sea coast and northern Iran, with sparse data elsewhere.
Across this region the principal reservoirs are Apodemus and Myodes voles in forested zones, supplemented by Rattus species in port cities. Human exposure typically happens through inhalation of aerosolized droppings, urine, or saliva from these rodents — most often in rural housing, agricultural buildings, or poorly ventilated indoor spaces with recent rodent activity.
How State of Palestine is tracked
Signals are ingested every five minutes from a global feed of open news sources, geolocated to State of Palestine, then de-duplicated by URL and headline. Each signal links back to its original report so you can verify the source.
For confirmed case counts and clinical guidance in State of Palestine, consult your national public health authority and the World Health Organization. This page is a surveillance signal, not a diagnostic tool.
Hantavirus surveillance · the Middle East
Other countries in the Middle East tracked by Hantavirus Tracker:
Authoritative sources on hantavirus
- CDC — Hantavirus · U.S. case data, transmission, prevention
- WHO — Hantavirus · global guidance
- ECDC — Hantavirus infection · European epidemiology
- Wikipedia — Orthohantavirus · background