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Hantavirus Tracker — Flagstaff

Arizona · United States · Population 76K

minimal Risk

High-elevation rural communities with periodic clusters.

ACTIVE CASES

0

YEAR-TO-DATE

0

TREND

STABLE

ENDEMIC

YES

Live Surveillance — Flagstaff

Local Pathogen Profile

Primary strains
Sin Nombre
Reservoir species
Deer mouse
Endemic status
Established endemic transmission
Travel advisory
No travel advisory

Live Alerts — Flagstaff

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Frequently asked — Hantavirus in Flagstaff

Is hantavirus a current risk in Flagstaff?
Flagstaff, Arizona is an endemic region for hantavirus. Current risk level is minimal, with 0 active and 0 year-to-date confirmed cases. High-elevation rural communities with periodic clusters.
Which hantavirus strain is found in Arizona?
The primary circulating strain in Arizona is Sin Nombre, carried by the deer mouse. Pandemic Watch tracks every official Sin Nombre alert from CDC, PHAC, UKHSA, ECDC, and WHO and surfaces them on this page in real time.
How is hantavirus transmitted in United States?
Hantavirus is transmitted primarily through inhalation of aerosolized rodent urine, droppings, or saliva — most commonly when disturbing rodent-infested enclosed spaces such as cabins, sheds, or barns. Direct rodent bites are a rarer transmission route. There is no documented sustained human-to-human transmission of Sin Nombre.
What are the symptoms of hantavirus infection?
Early symptoms (1–8 weeks after exposure) include fever, fatigue, severe muscle aches in the thighs, hips, and back, headache, dizziness, chills, and abdominal issues. Late-stage Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS) progresses rapidly to coughing and shortness of breath caused by fluid in the lungs. Anyone with these symptoms and a possible rodent exposure should seek emergency care immediately.
How can residents and travelers in Flagstaff protect themselves?
Seal entry points to keep rodents out of homes, set traps, and never sweep or vacuum dry rodent droppings. Wet down contaminated areas with a 10% bleach solution, wear an N95 respirator and gloves during cleanup, and ventilate enclosed spaces for 30+ minutes before entry. Travelers should avoid sleeping in cabins with visible rodent activity.
Where does Pandemic Watch get Flagstaff hantavirus data from?
All alerts on this page are pulled directly from official public health sources: CDC NNDSS for the United States, PHAC NML for Canada, UKHSA for the United Kingdom, ECDC for Europe, and WHO Disease Outbreak News globally. Feeds are ingested every 15 minutes and matched against Flagstaff, Arizona, and United States.

About Hantavirus in Flagstaff

High-elevation rural communities with periodic clusters. Health authorities continue to monitor Sin Nombre activity in Arizona, with the deer mouse serving as the primary reservoir species. Year-to-date 0 confirmed cases have been reported in United States.

Pandemic Watch tracks Hantavirus indicators in Flagstaff continuously, integrating data from the CDC, PHAC, UKHSA, and WHO. Subscribers receive SMS alerts within 15 minutes of any escalation event affecting Arizona or surrounding areas.

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