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Understanding Nipah Virus: Droplet Transmission and Its Lethality at 40-70%

by Colleen Fleiss on Sep 17 2023 10:23 PM
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Understanding Nipah Virus: Droplet Transmission and Its Lethality at 40-70%
Nipah virus, as stated by Dr. Rajiv Bahl, Director General of the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), can be transmitted through respiratory droplets and carries a mortality rate ranging from 40 to 70 percent.
In comparison, COVID-19 has only "2-3 percent fatality rate", he said at a press conference here. "It can be spread via droplets, besides blood and bodily fluids," he said. Despite the high death rate, Bahl said that the virus is not as transmissible as COVID-19 and has small episodes, with maximum cases going up to 100. Nipah was first recognized in 1999, since then it has made its mark in four or five countries: Malaysia, Singapore, Bangladesh, the Philippines, and India.

Kerala Faces Fourth Nipah Outbreak

Since 2018, Kerala is currently seeing its fourth outbreak of Nipah. The present cases have been reported about 15 km from where the initial Nipah virus outbreak in southern Indian state was first identified in Kozhikode in May 2018 and then again in 2021. In June 2019, a sporadic case of Nipah resurfaced from a geographically different location, at Kochi.

In the latest outbreak, 6 people have been infected with 2 deaths reported (1 Trusted Source
Nipah virus: India’s Kerala state moves quickly to control fresh outbreak

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). Bahl said containment is the only strategy, in the absence of any vaccine or medications. He also noted that India is procuring 20 more doses of monoclonal antibody from Australia. He said that the M102.4 antibody, tested on 14 people globally and found safe, that is no one died, by the University of Queensland in Australia. It will be administered on "compassionate ground", as there has been no knowledge of its side effects, and will be decided by the Kerala government and doctors there.

"Currently India has doses for 10 people, we have requested for 10 more people," Bahl said. Each person requires 2 doses, and so far it has not been administered to anyone in India, he added. The vaccine was developed by Queensland researchers in 3 batches and stored in minus 80 temperature and is stable for 5 years. India first received the vaccine in 2018, but couldn't use it as the Nipah virus cases died down by then.

Reference:
  1. Nipah virus: India's Kerala state moves quickly to control fresh outbreak - (https://www.bmj.com/content/382/bmj.p2117)

Source-IANS


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