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Nipah Virus Panic in Kerala

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May 23, 2018

What is the issue?

  • The lethal Nipah Virus has been spreading in northern Kerala, creating a health emergency and widespread panic.
  • The Zoonotic virus is suspected to have spread to humans from infected bats, and actions to curtail the spread of infections are currently underway.

How is the current episode panning out?

  • Nipah spreads from fruit bats to humans and other animals, mainly through bad dropping or bodily remains and then spreads laterally within a species.
  • But less than 1% of the fruit bats are estimated be infected with Nipah virus and it is even rarer for it to infect humans.
  • It is indeed highly contagious within humans, and the current episode in Kerala even killed a nurse who was treating another Nipah patient.
  • The outbreak has already cost the lives of 10 people out of 12 confirmed cases in Kozhikode and Malappuram of Kerala.
  • Notably, the previous serious outbreak in India was in 2001, when the Siliguri district of West Bengal recorded 42 Nipah related deaths.
  • The disease has a high mortality rate, but experts stress that there is no reason to panic because Nipah outbreaks have always been generally localised.

What are the symptoms of Nipah?

  • The classical symptom is acute and rapidly progressive encephalitis (brain inflammation and pain) with or without respiratory involvement.
  • Other more noticeable symptoms include non-productive cough during the early part of the disease.
  • Nipah encephalitis comes with 3-14 days of fever and headache, followed by drowsiness, disorientation and mental confusion.
  • Acute encephalitis progresses to coma within 24-48 hours.

How can the spread of Nipah be contained?

  • Virologists working on the ground have asserted that early diagnosis has helped in containing the spread in the current case.  
  • Timely laboratory confirmation and aggressive tracing of those who came in contact with patient can contain spread of the virus.
  • This is very important because there is no effective specific treatment for the infection and hospitalisation is only to support our bodily immune systems.
  • Standard infection control practices (like washing and sanitising) and proper barrier nursing techniques are also critical for curtailing spread. 

 

Source: Indian Express

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