HomeNewsIndiaNipah virus in India: Six outbreaks since 2001

Nipah virus in India: Six outbreaks since 2001

The Union Health Ministry has confirmed that the two people who recently died in Kerala's Kozhikode due to “unnatural fever” were infected by the Nipah virus.

September 13, 2023 / 08:38 IST
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Human infection may occur through close contact with infected animals or their bodily fluids, including saliva and urine, a phenomenon referred to as a "spillover event"

Kerala has said that tests from the ICMR-National Institute of Virology (NIV), Pune has confirmed that four individuals have tested positive for Nipah on 12 September late evening. Union Minister of Health Mansukh Mandaviya had earlier disclosed that two fatalities in Kozhikode, Kerala, were due to the Nipah virus on September 12. He said that a central team of experts has been sent to Kerala to take stock of the situation and assist the state government in the management of the Nipah virus infection.

This is the fifth time the disease has been detected in India. According to the National Centre for Disease Control, Nipah is a zoonotic virus, meaning that it initially spreads between animals and people.

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The primary animal host reservoir for Nipah is a fruit bat, colloquially known as the flying fox. Infected fruit bats serve as vectors for transmitting the virus to humans and other animals, such as pigs. Human infection may occur through close contact with infected animals or their bodily fluids, including saliva and urine, a phenomenon referred to as a "spillover event".