About HantavirusQuestions.com

Independent, evidence-based information about hantavirus — sourced directly from CDC, WHO, and peer-reviewed research, reviewed monthly, and written for people who want straight answers.

Our Mission

HantavirusQuestions.com was built to provide clear, sourced, and accurate information about hantavirus — a rare but serious zoonotic disease that is frequently misunderstood and underreported in mainstream coverage.

Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) carries a case fatality rate of approximately 38% in the United States, yet most coverage either ignores it or sensationalizes sporadic outbreaks. This site exists to fill that gap with content grounded in what CDC, WHO, and peer-reviewed science actually show — without alarmism, misinformation, or commercial distortion.

All content is written for a general audience and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. In an emergency, call 911.

Who Writes This Site

All content is researched and written by Andy Wilcox, founder of the Virus Questions network. Andy is an independent researcher — not a physician, virologist, or epidemiologist.

His background is in analytical research: applying rigorous primary-source methodology to complex bodies of evidence. He holds an MBA and professional credentials (CPA, PMP), and has spent 30+ years as a consultant, operating executive, and investor. He brings that same analytical discipline to public health information — working directly from CDC, WHO, NIH, and peer-reviewed sources rather than from secondary summaries or news articles.

This site has no medical reviewer. No licensed clinician reviews content before or after publication. The content represents Andy Wilcox's independent research and synthesis of authoritative primary sources — not medical opinion. For personal medical concerns, consult a qualified healthcare provider.

Primary Sources We Use

Every factual claim on clinical pages is sourced to one of the following. We do not cite news articles or other websites as primary evidence for clinical claims.

  • CDC — U.S. primary authority for hantavirus surveillance, case definitions, and clinical guidance
  • WHO — global epidemiological data and international public health guidance
  • NIH / PubMed — biomedical research database and peer-reviewed literature
  • State health departments — outbreak and surveillance data for U.S. cases
  • Peer-reviewed journalsJournal of Infectious Diseases, Emerging Infectious Diseases (CDC), and others indexed in PubMed

We use a hierarchy of evidence consistent with evidence-based medicine: systematic reviews and RCTs first, followed by CDC/WHO guidance, then observational data. When sources disagree, we note the disagreement rather than picking a side.

Monthly Content Review Process

Clinical pages on this site are reviewed monthly via an automated process:

  1. Current CDC and WHO source documents are fetched on the first of each month.
  2. An AI-assisted review compares existing page claims against those authoritative sources.
  3. Only claims that are directly contradicted by current authority guidance are flagged — the review does not rewrite or expand content speculatively.
  4. Corrections are applied to the affected pages and committed to the site.
  5. The "Last reviewed" date on each clinical page is updated to reflect the most recent review cycle, even if no content changes were needed.

This means clinical pages are never more than ~6 weeks out of date with CDC/WHO guidance. The review is logged in our GitHub repository, so the change history is public and auditable.

Readers and clinicians can also submit corrections at any time via our corrections page. Confirmed corrections are applied promptly and noted on the page.

What This Site Is Not

  • Not medical advice. Nothing here should be used to make personal health decisions. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider.
  • Not affiliated with CDC or WHO. We cite these agencies as primary sources; we are not affiliated with or endorsed by them.
  • Not a news publication. We don't cover breaking news. The daily news feed on the homepage aggregates headlines from authoritative sources (WHO, CDC, STAT News, CIDRAP) for awareness — it is not editorial coverage.
  • Not a peer-reviewed resource. We synthesize peer-reviewed research for a general audience; the synthesis itself has not been peer-reviewed.

Affiliate & Advertising Disclosure

Amazon Associates: HantavirusQuestions.com participates in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. When you click an Amazon link and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you. This does not influence our product recommendations or editorial content. Product pages follow CDC guidance — only items that CDC or peer-reviewed sources identify as relevant to hantavirus prevention or cleanup are recommended.

Google AdSense: This site displays ads served by Google AdSense. Ad content is determined by Google's algorithms and is not selected or endorsed by this site.

Medical Disclaimer

The information on HantavirusQuestions.com is for general informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended as, and does not constitute, medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the guidance of a qualified healthcare provider for any medical concerns. In an emergency, call 911.

Contact & Corrections

For corrections, errors, or feedback, use the Contact page or the Corrections page. We read all submissions and prioritize factual corrections. Confirmed corrections are applied promptly and the change is noted on the affected page.

The Virus Questions Network

HantavirusQuestions.com is part of the Virus Questions network, a collection of independent, disease-specific reference sites covering major viral pathogens. All sites follow the same editorial standards, source hierarchy, and monthly review process. Other sites in the network: