Scientists Claim Drug Designed to Beat Ebola Also Fights Off Nipah

Remdesivir, which is also being tested against the Ebola virus, protected African green monkeys from a lethal dose of Nipah.

New Delhi: Scientists may have found a cure for the Nipah virus, which in May 2018 claimed 17 lives in Kerala. A group reported last week that an experimental drug given to African green monkeys protected them from the virus, which is emerging as a lethal and pandemic disease.

According to the New York Times, the antiviral drug remdesivir protected the monkeys from lethal doses of Nipah virus, for which there is no approved vaccine or cure. Scientists are also testing the drug against the Ebola virus, which has resurfaced in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

An experimental monoclonal antibody is the only available treatment for a Nipah virus infection. It was tested during an outbreak in India last year. The virus gets its name from the first place it was detected in, Kampung Sungai Nipah in Malaysia, in 1998. Fruit bats are the natural hosts of the virus, while pigs are intermediate hosts.

The WHO’s fact sheet on the virus says it can be transmitted to humans from animals (bats, pigs), and can also be transmitted from one human to another. In 2001, a Nipah virus outbreak in West Bengal killed 45 persons. A Nipah virus infection can cause encephalitis and pneumonia and is lethal in about 70% of cases.

In the new trial, scientists gave a lethal dose of Nipah virus to eight African green monkeys. Four of them were given intravenous remdesivir, the experimental drug, and survived. The other four monkeys that did not get the drug died within eight days.

Emmie de Wit, a virologist at the US’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said the drug “will give us an extra treatment that could be used relatively quickly”, if it wins approval. de Wit is a lead author of the study, which was published in Science Translational Medicine. “The average person who reaches a hospital dies within two days, so it’s hard to protect them once they’re infected,” she told New York Times.

Also Read: Rather Than Blaming Bats for Nipah Infection, We Should Improve Public Health

Though Ebola and Nipah belong to different viral families, remdesivir appears effective against both. It has also shown to be effective against two other pandemic threats: Lassa fever and MERS coronavirus, and also against respiratory syncytial virus.

According to de Wit, though the viruses have very different outer shells, their polymerases – the genome-copying enzyme that remdesivir targets –are similar.

The drug was given to the monkeys relatively early after they were exposed to the virus. The authors said the study does not show how effective remdesivir can be if it is administered at a latter time. This is crucial, because disease progression in humans infected with Nipah virus is very rapid, with an average time from disease onset to death of 5 days.

Previous studies have shown that treatment of Nipah virus has to be administered earlier to be efficacious.

“It will be important to determine how long after lethal Nipah virus Bangladesh challenge remdesivir can be administered without losing efficacy,” the authors said.

Kerala’s View of Health Insurance after 2018’s Nipah Outbreak and Floods

Concerted efforts are being made to increase health spending in the state and focus on disease detection.

Last year was a challenging year for the state of Kerala, when it faced a Nipah outbreak in Kozhikode and then the worst floods in a century. Kerala’s new budget – announced in 2019 – will have to factor in the learnings from these two major events.

The Nipah outbreak in early May in Kozhikode was a stark reminder of the virus’ fatality and the precautions required to be taken for infection control purposes in healthcare settings.

The outbreak infected 23 people. Only two could be saved.

Also read: How Kerala Passed the Tough Nipah Test

Barely a month after the outbreak, Nipah was declared over. Soon after, however, the floods came. Wreaking havoc in most parts of Kerala, they led to considerable loss of life and livelihoods. After the floods subsided, the health department was put on alert to look out for the spread of communicable diseases resulting from the aftermath of the deluge.

Budgetary allocations of the state

It is against this background that Kerala – while still trying to rebuild after the floods – presented its new budget.

The budget allocations for public health have seen a marginal increase from last year’s figures. But spending on health has seen an overall increased every year.

Some of the spending areas allocated in this budget include the upgradation of primary health centres to family health centres. With the increasing burden of communicable diseases, the state has decided to invest more on surveillance and public health measures.

Against this backdrop of increased focus on public health after the Nipah outbreak and the floods, concerted efforts are being made to increase health spending and focus more on disease detection and reduction. 

This increased focus led to the conceptualisation and inauguration of a virology institute in the state, which became operational in the first week of February.

State schemes versus Ayushaman Bharat?

Last year, the central government made a grand announcement about the National Health Protection Scheme, now known as the Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (PMJAY). Meanwhile, around the same time, some states were wondering what would happen to their own schemes which had wider reach and were already being implemented in the state, albeit under different names.

For example, Kerala’s Comprehensive Health Insurance Scheme (CHIS) claims to covers 40.96 Lakh families and has reportedly managed to cover almost 50% of the state’s population.

Over the years, different government schemes have tried to improve upon the CHIS and top it with higher insurance covers. From CHIS it became CHIS-Plus followed by newer schemes being announced by the Centre in subsequent years, adding to the existing schemes being run by the state government.

Under these circumstances, the Kerala state government decided to float its own scheme – called the Comprehensive Health Care scheme – announced during the 2019-20 Budget. 

While the name was changed, state finance minister Thomas Issac emphasised that no beneficiary would be left out and that every effort would be made to include them according to the list of eligible beneficiaries. In his Budget speech on January 31, he also mentioned this scheme could not take off because the Centre had come up with its own scheme (AB- PMJAY).

Also read: Explainer: Nipah Virus in Kerala and What the Government Is Doing About It

Over the past three years there have been numerous changes made to the original Rashtriya Swasthya Bhima Yojana health insurance scheme (RSBY) in Kerala. The state rolled out the Karunya Benevolent scheme (2011-12) which provides monetary help for treatment sought in public as well as private hospitals.

But as the central government announced the arrival of Ayushman Bharat, it was up to the state governments to decide whether they wanted to continue with their own schemes or wanted to join PMJAY.

Kerala signed an MOU to join PMJAY in November 2018. The state’s finance minister who had voiced his concerns about funding and allocations for the ambitious PMJAY scheme, once again reiterated his concerns about the premium amount to be coughed up by the state and the number of beneficiaries who would be covered.

Also read: In the Wake of Ayushman Bharat Come Sops for Private Hospitals

In the budget for the year 2019-2020, Thomas Issac presented a new scheme which would be fully funded by the lottery revenue from the state lottery department to provide for insurance covers for the new scheme. The scheme will use the funds from the Centre allotted to Ayushman Bharat and combine it with the state’s lottery revenue to include those who have been excluded from the Centre’s scheme and make it more comprehensive.

This would mean that the new scheme will merge with the old Karunya Benevolent scheme and be called Comprehensive Health Security Scheme(CHSS). This scheme will roll out during the month of May 2019.

We await to see if the scheme will receive the promised financial funding from the Centre and whether the state will be able to seamlessly balance between their needs and the supply of funds from the Centre.

The scheme is also bound to be reviewed post-2019 Lok Sabha elections, as some states like Karnataka – who shifted from being BJP-ruled to coming under Congress rule – have mentioned their willingness to withdraw from the Ayushman Bharat scheme and to re-introduce their old state specific schemes.  

Jisha Jayashree is a PhD candidate at the Centre of Social Medicine and Community Health, Jawaharlal Nehru University. Her PhD looks at the role of the private sector in Ayurvedic education in Kerala.

Kerala Govt Declares Kozhikode and Malappuram Districts Nipah Virus Free

The state health minister K.K. Shylaja said, “A decision to declare both districts as Nipah virus free was taken by the government as no fresh cases have been reported after June 1.”

Kozhikode (Kerala): Kozhikode and Malappuram districts, where 17 people died of Nipah in May, was on Sunday declared free of the virus by the Kerala government.

“A decision to declare both districts as Nipah virus free was taken by the government as no fresh cases have been reported after June 1,” health minister K.K. Shylaja said.

She was speaking at a function and got up to felicitate members of the medical teams, support staff and volunteers who fought against the spread of the virus in the districts.

The event commemorated Lini Puthuserry, the nurse of Perumbra taluk hospital who died after contracting the virus while treating patients, by presenting her husband, Sajeesh with awards.

Doctors and para medical teams were also honoured at the function.

The function was held as part of National Doctors Day, which was observed across the country today to recognise the contributions of physicians to individual lives and communities.

The collectors of Kozhikode and Malapurram districts, U.V. Jose and Amit Kumar Meena and Manipal Virology Institute director G. Arunkumar were also honoured on the occasion.

Dr A.S. Anoop Kumar of city based Baby Memorial Hospital was presented with a special award for his efforts to identify and prevent the virus outbreak.

The government had on June 11 lifted the travel advisory it had issued in the wake of the virus and had said it was safe to travel to any part of the state.

It had lifted the high alert in the districts and said the virus has been brought under control and its spread checked.

Educational institutions, which were scheduled to open on June 1, were reopened on 11 June.

Rather Than Blaming Bats for Nipah Infection, We Should Improve Public Health

As the southwest monsoon crosses the Kerala coast and there are chances of increased incidences of infectious diseases, strengthened public health awareness and action can help in overcoming infectious diseases – Nipah and others.

The Nipah virus (NiV) infection has claimed 16 lives, from Kozhikode and Malappuram districts of Kerala, in the month of May. Siblings Mohammed Sadik (26) and Mohammed Salih (28) died on May 5 and May 18 respectively in Perambra, Kozhikode district. Their aunt Mariam (50) passed away on May 19. Lini, who worked at the Taluk Hospital in Perambra and had nursed Salih at the hospital, died on May 21 due to the fever. That was the beginning of a panic outbreak in Kerala.

It was identified that there had been bats in the dug well which was the main source of drinking water for the Sadik-Salih family in Perambra. This created huge fear among the public, and people even called for the mass culling of bats.

However, the disease itself was contained quickly before it could become an outbreak. On May 24, the health ministry, government of India issued a media release stating that a multi-disciplinary team that was reviewing the situation from Kerala had concluded that “the Nipah virus disease is not a major outbreak and only a local occurrence.”

On May 25, there was news that added further confidence on the situation. Body fluid samples collected from the bats that were found hanging in the well in the Sadik-Salih household turned negative for Nipah virus. The National Institute of High Security Animal Diseases at Bhopal confirmed this after testing the samples. Further, samples sent from cattle and pigs in the vicinity that were also sent tested negative for Nipah virus.

Testing of cattle and pigs, along with the bats was important since the virus is known to transmit from bats to pigs to humans. Once infected, humans can infect others who come in contact with them.

Outbreaks of communicable diseases are not uncommon in Kerala. According to data collected by the Directorate of Health Services, government of Kerala, in 2017 an estimated 3.5 million different fever cases, including dengue, chikungunya and leptospirosis were reported from Kerala, mostly during the monsoon months. From these, 76 deaths were reported. Since these huge numbers of fever cases is normal in the state, Nipah was not noticed until three people from one family died.

What is the Nipah virus (NiV) and its infection?

An RNA virus was first detected in Kampung Sungai Nipah, Malaysia, in 1998. Natural hosts of this virus are fruit bats and pigs are intermediate hosts. According to the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) Nipah fact sheet, the virus can be transmitted to humans from animals (bats, pigs), and can also be transmitted directly from human to human. In 2001, it appeared in Bangladesh and same year the Nipah virus outbreak happened in Siliguri in West Bengal in India. Of the 65 infected in Siliguri, 45 persons died.

The disease can be identified through a polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) from the body fluids as well as antibody detection via the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) test. “Human infections range from asymptomatic infection, acute respiratory infection (mild or severe) and fatal encephalitis,” states the WHO fact sheet. There are no specific drugs or vaccines for NiV infection. Intensive supportive care is the recommended treatment.

A relief but the whodunnit persists

There is relief in Kerala that the infection did not spread into an outbreak and is now more or less under control. However, where the infection started from is the question that continues to be a mystery. Bat specialists were fairly sure that the bats hanging on the laterite walls of the dug well in the Sadik-Salih household were not the culprits.

The Nipah infection timeline from Kerala. Graphic. Credit: Kartik Chandramouli / Mongabay.

The Nipah infection timeline from Kerala. Graphic. Credit: Kartik Chandramouli/Mongabay.

“The bats hanging in the dug well were insect-eating ones, and insectivorous bats have not been seen to be the carriers of Nipah virus in the past,” said P.O. Nameer, professor and head, Centre for Wildlife Studies, College of Forestry of the Kerala Agricultural University.

“In my 20 years of experience studying bats in Kerala there has been no evidence of fruit-eating bats inside wells,” said Nameer. “The fruit eating bats roost on trees. The Pteropus fruit bats are the ones seen to be the most common carriers of the virus, which are the big fruit bats. What could be considered as a suspected carrier in Kerala is the great Indian fruit bat, also known as the Indian flying fox (Pteropus giganteus).”

Of the 33 species of bats found in Kerala, only five species are fruit bats belonging to the Pteropodidae family. These are the lesser dog-faced fruit bat (Cynopterus brachyotis), the short-nosed fruit bat (Cynopterus sphinx), the dawn bat (Eonycteris spelaea), the fulvous fruit bat (Rousettus leschenaultia) and the Indian flying fox.

As of now, it is not clear as to how, where and from whom the first infection happened in Perambra. Earlier reports stating that the brothers had visited Malaysia were found to be incorrect. Also, the authorities rebutted the possibility of one of them having got the infection from a nearby ecotourism destination since that is a popular place visited by many people.

Even while that mystery remains, the state government has been issuing advisories through print, television, radio and social media to take precautions to prevent contracting the infection. This includes steps such as not eating bird-eaten fruits, drink water after boiling and minimising contact with those infected. Isolation wards and protocols have been established at the medical college hospitals in the affected and nearby districts.

Targeting bats

Bats have been blamed as the cause for Nipah as they are the natural host of the virus. It is due to this reason that the Kerala government had to strictly warn public not to indulge in any activities that can harm the animal.

Merlin Tuttle, American ecologist, founder & executive director of Merlin Tuttle’s Bat Conservation told Mongabay-India in an email: “Virtually every animal species that has been carefully studied has some virus of potential risk to other species. In the past four decades, so-called ‘emerging diseases’ have killed fewer than 20,000 people worldwide, and there is no more than unsubstantiated speculation for blaming even half of those deaths on bats,” he added. He also reminded that some of the most valued crops rely heavily on flying foxes and their closest relatives for pollination. “Flying foxes are also Southeast Asia’s most important long-distance seed dispersers, essential to reforestation,” he stated.

He also said that bats in reality have one of the world’s finest safety records when it comes to living with people. Hundreds of bat biologists, millions of people who eat bats, and the millions more who share cities with huge bat colonies are no less healthy than others.

Nameer regretted that an unnecessary panic has spread among the people against bats. Bats have been living in close proximity to communities for ages. Most of the older open wells in the state, especially those that have been dug through laterite rock beds, commonly have bats hanging on the walls.

“It is neither possible, nor necessary to clean all these wells and remove bats,” he said. “In a crisis situation such as now we need to be careful and take precautionary measures. Let us boil water for drinking and cooking.”

Nameer consulted Paul Racey, a leading authority on bats, retired professor at the University of Aberdeen and the chair of the Bat Specialist Group of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) over this issue. In an email to Nameer, Racey said that the disease spreads mainly by drinking palm sap that has been infected with the Nipah virus by the greater Indian fruit bat Pteropus giganteus. Preventing bats’ access to the sap collection pots has reduced the infection rate in other parts of the world. “In Bangladesh, bamboo skirts have been deployed to prevent bats from contaminating palm sap.  Do people consume palm sap, either fresh or fermented, in Kerala? This is a possible route of infection,” Racey asked in his mail.

Since palm sap toddy is a common drink in Kerala, experts advise avoiding the drink at present. This is better way to prevent the infection from spreading than harming the fruit bats.

“Culling of bats has to be totally avoided even if tests show some of the fruit bats in the region are carrying Nipah virus,” Nameer emphasised. “Earlier experience from Malayasia has shown that the virus will get more virulent if the animal is stressed and this could cause more infections.”

Ecological imbalances can also stress out bats

The virus that is present in the bats get virulent when the mammals are stressed mostly out of human-induced factors. A WHO report on Nipah Virus Infection states that “there is strong evidence that emergence of bat-related viral infections communicable to humans and animals has been attributed to the loss of natural habitats of bats.” It further adds, “As the flying fox habitat is destroyed by human activity the bats get stressed and hungry, their immune system gets weaker, their virus load goes up and a lot of virus spills out in their urine and saliva.”

According to Nameer, the bats can be stressed out due to various reasons, “It can be loss of habitat, lack of food, climate change or deforestation that can lead to the virus spilling out.”

“After the El Nino phenomenon in 1997, fires in Kalimantan and Sumatra destroyed approximately five million hectares of forest. The haze badly affected the flowering and fruiting of trees in southern peninsular Malaysia. This loss of habitat and lack of food forced the fruit bats to migrate to orchard farms and that stress caused the spill out of virus,” B. Ekbal, neurosurgeon and a renowned public health activist in Kerala said.

These orchards to which the bats migrated were surrounded by a number of pig farms. In Malaysia, the virus was first transferred to pigs and later got transmitted to humans. More than a million pigs were culled to control the outbreak then, recalled Ekbal. The WHO report also says that 90% of the infected people in 1998-99 outbreak were pig farmers.

Improved public health awareness needed

Both Nameer and Ekbal emphasise the need for better public health awareness and preparedness.

According to the WHO report, 600 Nipah cases were reported in the world from 1998 to 2015. Among this almost 50% of the infected patients died.

“This is a small number considering the world statistics for other diseases. In Kerala ten people die daily in road accidents. So there is no need of a panic. This virus can be tackled with precautions,” Ekbal said. He also added that state should give more importance to public health as presently it is focusing more on curative medicines.

“Avoid eating bat bitten fruits, take proper precautions while contacting infected persons and drink only boiled water,” Nameer added.

As the southwest monsoon crosses the Kerala coast and there are chances of increased incidences of infectious diseases, strengthened public health awareness and action can help in overcoming infectious diseases – Nipah and others.

This article was originally published on Mongabay India and is republished here under a Creative Commons licence.

Nipah Virus: Health Ministry Issues Advisory; MoS Calls It ‘Localised’ Issue

Ashwini Kumar Choubey asked people not to panic, asserting that it was a “localised” occurrence in Kerala, where the number of deaths due to the outbreak has reached 12.

New Delhi: Amid fears that the Nipah virus has spread to other states such as Karnataka and Himachal Pradesh, the Union health ministry tonight issued an advisory for general public and healthcare personnel mentioning the preventive measures they should adopt in high-risk areas, along with information on how the disease spreads and what are the symptoms.

The ministry advised the general public to avoid consuming raw date palm sap or toddy, half-eaten fruits from the ground and refrain from entering into abandoned wells and eat only washed fruits.

It informed that handling of bodies of those who died due to the disease should be done in accordance with the government advisory and that during this emotional moment traditional rituals and practices may need to be modified to prevent the exposure of family members to the disease.

The advisory informed that Nipah virus which commonly affects animals such as bats, pigs, dogs, horses, etc. can spread from animals to humans and can sometimes cause serious illness among humans.

Spread of the Nipah virus to humans may occur after close contact with other Nipah infected people, infected bats, or infected pigs. Bat secretions laden with virus can infect people during fruit tree climbing, eating/handling contaminated fallen fruits or consuming raw date palm sap/juice or toddy, the advisory mentioned.

It said that human-to-human infection can occur from close contact with persons affected with Nipah at home while providing care or close contact and in hospital setting if appropriate personal protective equipments are not used.

It highlighted that people who are exposed to areas inhabited by fruit bats/ articles contaminated by secretions such as unused wells, fruit orchards, etc. are likely to be at higher risk of infections.

Persons with direct contact with sick pigs or their contaminated tissues, persons in close contact with a Nipah virus affected deceased during burial or cremation rituals or health care workers having direct contact with probable or confirmed cases without using standard precautionary measures are also at a high risk of developing the infection.

The ministry issued a separate advisory for healthcare personnel and advised them to wash hands thoroughly with soap and water for 20 seconds after contact with a sick patient, practice precautions for infection control while handling Nipah cases (suspected/confirmed), limiting use of injections and sharp objects.

For aerosol generating procedures, personal protective equipment such as individual gowns (impermeable), gloves, masks and goggles or face shields and shoe cover and the procedure should be performed in airborne isolation room.

All non-dedicated, non-disposable medical equipment used for patient care should be cleaned and disinfected as per manufacturers’ instructions and hospital policies.

If the use of sharp objects cannot be avoided, ensure that precautions are observed like never replace the cap on a used needle, never direct the point of a used needle towards any part of the body, do not remove used needles from disposable syringes by hand, and do not bend, break or otherwise manipulate used needles by hand, never re-use syringes or needles, dispose of syringes, needles, scalpel blades and other sharp objects in appropriate, puncture-resistant containers.

Ensure that containers for sharps objects are placed as close as possible to the immediate area where the objects are being used ( point of use’) to limit the distance between use and disposal, and ensure the containers remain upright at all times, the advisory said.

Earlier today, minister of state for health Ashwini Kumar Choubey asked people not to panic, asserting that it was a “localised” occurrence in Kerala, where the number of deaths due to the outbreak has reached 12.

Amid reports that dead bats have been found on the premises of a government school in Himachal Pradesh and two people suspected to be infected with the brain-damaging Nipah virus are under treatment in Karnataka, Choubey said the samples of dead bats found in HP have been sent to the National Institute of Virology (NIV) for investigation.

A multi-disciplinary central team led by the Director of the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) is constantly reviewing the situation of the Nipah virus disease in Kerala.

According to the advisory, large fruit bats of Pteropus genus are the natural reservoir of NiV. Presumably, pigs may become infected after consumption of partially bat eaten fruits that are dropped in pigsties. Seasonality was strongly implicated in NiV outbreaks in Bangladesh and India. All of the outbreaks occurred during the months of winter to spring (December-May) and the incubation period varies from 6-21 days.

One More Dead Due to Nipah Virus in Kerala. Should We Be Worried?

About 160 samples have been sent for testing at the virology institute and 13 cases have been found to be positive, of which 11 people have died.

New Delhi: The death toll due to the Nipah virus has risen 11 in Kerala, with one more person succumbing to the deadly virus this morning.

The deceased, V. Moosa (61), had been battling for his life for the past few days in a private hospital here and was on ventilator support, Kozhikode district medical officer Dr Jayasree E. told reporters.

About 160 samples have been sent for testing at the virology institute and 13 cases have been found to be positive, she said. Of the 13 confirmed cases, 11 people have died so far. The official further said confirmation is awaited with regard to one more death in Kozhikode.

This is the fourth death in Moosa’s family. Moosa’s sons Mohammed Saliah (28), Mohammed Sadiq (26) and a relative Mariumma had died earlier.

While two of the deaths have been confirmed due to Nipah, the blood samples of one of his sons had not been tested for the virus, sources said.

Nurse Lini Puthussery, who had initially treated the affected members of Moosa’s family in the Perambra Taluk hospital in the district, also died after being infected by the virus.

The state government has also issued an advisory, asking travellers to avoid visiting the four districts of Kozhikode, Malappuram, Wayanad and Kannur.

“Travelling to any part of Kerala is safe. However, if travellers wish to be extra cautious, they may avoid the four districts,” health secretary Rajeev Sadanandan said.

The government has also called for an all-party meeting at Kozhikode on May 25 to discuss the issue.

Most of the deaths reported are from Kozhikode and Malappuram districts from where 11 deaths have now been reported and 18 are undergoing treatment in various hospitals, including one in Wayanad.

Isolation wards have also been set up in Thalassery government hospital in Kannur, according to media reports.

In Kozhikode, from where seven deaths have been reported, district collector U.V. Jose has ordered temporary halt to all training programmes and summer camps in affected areas such as Changaroth, Koorachund, Kottur, Cheruvannur, Chekyad, Chakkittapara and Olavanna. The anganwadis in these regions too have been asked to close down to avoid spread of the virus among children.

However, no decision has been taken yet on reopening of schools after the summer vacation. The administration is hoping that the situation will be under control by the time schools reopen in a week.

In neighbouring Malappuram, where three persons have died due to the virus, orders have been issued in four panchayats to stop anganwadi classes for the time being.

A crisis management group has been constituted to coordinate the response of government agencies following the deaths in Kozhikode and Malappuram districts. An expert team from the National Centre for Disease Control, including its director Dr Sujeet Kumar Singh and head of epidemiology Dr S.K. Jain, and a high-level team from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences are camping in Kerala to take stock of the situation.

Surveillance has been increased in all districts.

According to NDTV, there is a fear that two people in Karnataka may also be infected with the virus. Symptoms of the virus were seen in a 20-year-old woman and a 75-year-old man in Mangalore after they travelled to neighbouring Kerala and came into contact with infected patients, Rajesh BV, a health official in Karnataka told the channel.

“They are not confirmed Nipah cases yet, so there is no need to panic,” he said by telephone. “The situation is under control.”

The outbreak of the virus infection, which is a newly emerging zoonosis that causes severe disease in both animals and humans, is suspected to be from an unused well which was infested with bats.

The natural host of the virus is believed to be fruit bats of the Pteropodidae family, Pteropus genus. The virus also transmits from humans to humans.

Treatment options are limited mostly to supportive care.

(With PTI inputs)