Hantavirus Tracker einbetten — Live-Zähler für Ihre Website
Ein kostenloser, schlanker Zähler, den Sie in jeden Nachrichtenartikel, Blog-Beitrag oder Infotext einbetten können.
Der Zähler zeigt die aktuelle Zahl bestätigter Hantavirus-Fälle und -Todesfälle, gespeist aus denselben WHO-, CDC-, ECDC- und PAHO-Quellen wie der Rest dieser Seite. Er aktualisiert sich, sobald wir aktualisieren. Region wählen (oder weltweit lassen), Design einstellen, Code in Ihr CMS einfügen.
Fügen Sie diesen Code in Ihr Artikel-HTML oder den Einbettungsblock Ihres CMS ein.
How to embed the Hantavirus Tracker widget on your website
- 1
Pick a widget and configure it
Choose the live counter or the cases & deaths map. Set the region (worldwide or any supported country), the theme (auto, light, or dark), and the source tier (official-only or include corroborated media). The counter offers a standard or compact layout; the map offers three aspect ratios.
- 2
Copy the embed code
The configurator generates a single <iframe> snippet with a hidden <noscript> fallback link for crawlers and feed readers. Press “Copy code” to copy the markup to your clipboard.
- 3
Paste into your site
Drop the snippet into any HTML page, CMS Custom HTML block, or rich-text editor that accepts iframes — WordPress, Ghost, Webflow, Squarespace, Wix, Notion, plain HTML. The widget is responsive and fits any container width up to 560 pixels.
Frequently asked questions
Is the hantavirus tracker widget free to use?
Yes. The widget is free to embed on any website — personal blog, public-health page, university course, news article, or commercial publication. The only condition is that the visible outbreakindex.com link in the footer of the widget stays in place so readers can verify the source.
What is the difference between the counter and the map embed?
The counter is a compact card that shows the current confirmed case and death count for a region — ideal next to a paragraph in an article or in a sidebar. The map plots cases and deaths as halos on a world map, sized to the magnitude at each location — better as an article hero or for explaining geographic spread. Both pull from the same dataset and update on the same cadence, so you can put them on the same page without contradiction.
Is the map embed interactive?
Yes. Readers can pan and zoom inside the iframe just like on the main tracker map. The widget loads lazily — Mapbox tiles only download once the iframe enters the viewport — so an embed below the fold doesn't slow down the host page's first paint. The default region zoom is calibrated for the country you pick, so worldwide pages open framed on the whole world and country pages open framed on the country.
What size does the map embed render at?
The map widget defaults to a 16:9 widescreen aspect ratio at up to 560 pixels wide, with classic 4:3 and square 1:1 also available. The iframe uses CSS aspect-ratio so it scales proportionally to whatever container you drop it into — full-width hero, narrower sidebar, or a centered figure with margins on either side. There is no fixed pixel height to maintain on the host page.
Does the embed track my readers?
No. The iframe loads no third-party analytics, no cookies, and no trackers. The only network request the widget makes is the initial HTML fetch from our CDN, which has no user-identifying payload. The embed is safe to use on pages with strict privacy policies and works under most Content Security Policy configurations.
Will the counts update automatically after I paste the code?
Yes. The iframe re-fetches the current snapshot every time your page loads. New data lands as soon as we publish an update — typically once a day for official-tier sources, and more often during active outbreaks. There is nothing for you to redeploy.
Can I customise the region, theme, or language of the embed?
Yes. The configurator above writes everything into the URL — change the region (any of 50+ countries or worldwide), the theme (auto, light, dark), the source tier (official-only, or include corroborated media), the layout (standard or compact), or the language (12 supported) and the snippet updates instantly. Each combination is its own cached URL.
Will it work on WordPress, Ghost, Notion, Webflow, and other CMS platforms?
Yes, on any platform that allows an <iframe>. WordPress accepts the snippet in a Custom HTML block, Ghost in an HTML card, Notion via /embed with the live counter URL, and Webflow, Squarespace, and Wix all expose an HTML/Embed component. Static-site generators (Jekyll, Hugo, Astro, 11ty, Next.js) accept raw HTML inline. Substack and Medium do not allow third-party iframes — paste the live counter URL on its own line and the platform will render a link preview.
Can I put multiple counters on the same page?
Yes. Each iframe is independent — show a worldwide counter at the top of an article and country-specific counters next to regional sections, all on the same page. Each one is its own document, so they cannot interfere with each other or with the host page's styles.
Where does the data come from?
The widget reads from the same dataset that powers Hantavirus Tracker: the World Health Organization (WHO) Disease Outbreak News, the US CDC's National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS), the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) ATLAS, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), Germany's Robert Koch Institute (RKI), and ProMED-mail. Every case has a primary source you can verify on the main site.
Can I style the widget to match my site's brand?
The widget ships with three theme presets (light, dark, auto) and two layouts (standard, compact), and uses a font stack that falls back to system-ui so it visually adapts to most sites. The iframe is isolated by design: external CSS cannot reach inside it. This is intentional — it guarantees the same look on every embedder and protects the widget against host-page style regressions.
Is the iframe AMP-compatible?
Yes. Wrap the snippet in an <amp-iframe> with a layout attribute and a sandbox value of allow-scripts allow-same-origin. The widget itself loads no scripts, so the sandbox is a formality required by AMP's validator.
What is hantavirus and which diseases does the counter track?
Hantaviruses are a family of rodent-borne viruses that cause hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) in the Americas and haemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) in Europe and Asia. The counter aggregates confirmed cases across all human-pathogenic hantavirus strains — Sin Nombre, Andes, Puumala, Hantaan, Seoul, Dobrava — and their associated syndromes.