One dead from Nipah virus in India's Kerala state, state health minister
says on local TV
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[July 22, 2024]
KOCHI, India (Reuters) - Authorities in southern India's Kerala
state are taking preventive steps after the death of a 14-year-old boy
from the Nipah virus and the identification of 60 persons in the
high-risk category, the state's health minister said on Sunday.
Parts of Kerala are among those most at risk globally for outbreaks of
the virus, a Reuters investigation showed last year. Nipah, which comes
from fruit bats and animals such as pigs, can cause a lethal,
brain-swelling fever in humans.
Nipah is classified as a priority pathogen by the World Health
Organization (WHO) because of its potential to trigger an epidemic.
There is no vaccine to prevent infection and no treatment to cure it.
"The infected boy died on Sunday after a cardiac arrest," Veena George,
the state health minister told local TV reporters, speaking in the
Malayalam language.
Earlier, in a statement on Saturday, she said as part of Nipah control,
the government has issued orders to set up 25 committees to identify and
isolate affected people.
Dr. Anoop Kumar, director of critical care medicine at Aster MIMS
Hospital in Calicut, said one positive case of Nipah had been diagnosed
in a school-going boy and persons who had been in contact with him were
being watched.
"There is a minimum chance of an outbreak of Nipah virus at this stage,"
he said, adding that the situation would be monitored for the next 7-10
days.
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A patient, who according to medics is suffering from Nipah
infection, is shifted to an ICU of Nipah isolation ward in Kozhikode
Medical College in Kozhikode district in the southern state of
Kerala, India, July 20, 2024. REUTERS/CK Thanseer/File Photo
There are 214 people on the primary
contact list of the boy, the statement said. Among them, 60 are in
the high-risk category, it said, and isolation wards have been set
up at health institutions to treat patients.
Family members of the affected patient were kept at a local hospital
for observation, after a case of Nipah virus was confirmed in
Malappuram, a town about 350 km (220 miles) from Kerala's capital
Thiruvananthapuram, local media reports said. Other people who might
be at risk were asked to isolate at home.
The state government said it is working to trace any affected people
to contain the spread of the virus. Nipah has been linked to the
deaths of dozens of people in Kerala since its first appearance in
the state in 2018.
The virus was first identified 25 years ago in Malaysia and has led
to outbreaks in Bangladesh, India and Singapore.
(Reporting by Sivaram Venkirasubramanian in Kochi and Manoj Kumar in
New Delhi; Editing by Tom Hogue)
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