Second person dead from Nipah virus in India’s Kerala in 2024
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Nipah is classified as a priority pathogen by the World Health Organisation (WHO) because of its potential to trigger an epidemic.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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KOCHI - A 24-year-old student has died from the Nipah virus
This is the second death caused by Nipah in Kerala since July. Nipah is classified as a priority pathogen by the World Health Organisation (WHO) because of its potential to trigger an epidemic. There is no vaccine to prevent infection and no treatment to cure it.
Parts of Kerala are among those most at risk globally for outbreaks of the virus, a Reuters investigation showed in 2023. Nipah, which comes from fruit bats and animals such as pigs, can cause a lethal, brain-swelling fever in humans.
The student started showing fever symptoms on Sept 4 and died five days later, said Dr R. Renuka, a district medical officer in the town of Malappuram, located in northern Kerala.
A blood sample from the victim sent to the National Institute of Virology in Pune for tests confirmed a Nipah infection on Sept 9, Dr Renuka said.
Five other people who have developed primary symptoms of a Nipah infection have had their blood samples drawn and sent for tests, she said, without saying if they were primary contacts of the dead person.
Nearly 151 people are being monitored for symptoms after they were found to be on the primary contact list of the victim, who had come from Bengaluru, she said.
This is the second death from a Nipah infection in Malappuram in 2024 after a 14-year-old boy succumbed to the virus in July.
Nipah has been linked to the deaths of dozens of people in Kerala since its first appearance in the state in 2018. REUTERS