Direct answer: There isn’t a “latest” news cycle for the 1993 Four Corners hantavirus outbreak because it occurred nearly three decades ago; what’s available are historical reviews and anniversary commemorations rather than current events.
Context and concise background:
- The 1993 Four Corners hantavirus outbreak led to the identification of Sin Nombre virus, with transmission from deer mice to humans in the Four Corners region. This foundational event shaped understanding of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) and its epidemiology.[4]
- Contemporary sources celebrate the 25th anniversary and summarize the clinical course, fatality patterns, and public health response from that period, rather than reporting new cases or updates.[6][7]
What you can look for if you want deeper context:
- Scholarly reviews and CDC/EID articles that revisit the outbreak’s virology, transmission routes, and long-term lessons for surveillance and wildlife management.[7][6]
- Historical timelines and case counts published around the event’s anniversaries, which synthesize national and regional impacts in 1993–1994.[4]
If you’d like, I can pull together a short, sourced timeline or a summary of key findings from the best-referenced post-1993 reviews to give you a compact, reliable overview. I can also tailor the return to focus on epidemiology, clinical features, or public health response—just tell me which angle you prefer.
Sources
In May, 1993 a 19-year old man suddenly developed shortness of breath while driving through the Four Corners region in New Mexico. He had complained of fever and muscle pain a few days before, but generally was in good health. By the time he pulled over and paramedics arrived, he had gone into respiratory failure and later died from an acute pulmonary edema in the emergency department of Gallup Indian Medical Center.
blogs.agu.orgLocationFour Corners Date1993 Confirmed cases33 in Four Corners states; 48 nationwide Recovered14 in Four Corners states; 21 nationwide Deaths19 in Four Corners states; 27 nationwide Fatality rate58% in Four Corners states; 56% nationwide … Tempest was aware of the three recent cases in New Mexico as well as one from the previous November in Arizona. Health officials in Arizona informed him of another recent case, so on May 17, Malone and Tempest notified the NM Department of Health of their...
wikipedia.nucleos.comHantavirus—Anniversary of Four Corners Outbreak
wwwnc.cdc.govThe cause of the outbreak was found to be a previously unknown species of hantavirus, which was responsible for a new form of illness known as hantavirus pulmonary syndrome or HPS. The virus is carried by deer mice. Originally referred to as "Four Corners virus", "Muerto Canyon virus", and "Convict Creek virus", it was later named Sin Nombre virus. Transmission to humans was found to have occurred through contact with aerosolized deer mice droppings in enclosed spaces in and around the homes...
medbox.iiab.meDuring the spring of 1993, a mysterious respiratory disease struck the Four Corners region of the southwestern United States. Persons who became ill were generally young and previously healthy before succumbing to an acute febrile illness that began ...
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov