No need to panic. Risk of Nipah spread low after India, Bangladesh cases, says WHO

UN health agency confirms three recent Nipah infections, two in India and one in Bangladesh, but assesses the regional and global risk as low despite the virus’s high fatality rate and lack of a vaccine.

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FILE PHOTO: A patient, suffering from Nipah, shifted to an ICU ward in Kozhikode district in the southern state of Kerala, India, July 20 2024. / Reuters

The World Health Organisation has said the risk of the deadly Nipah virus spreading was low after three cases of infection were recently confirmed in India and Bangladesh.

Nipah, which spreads from animals to humans, has no vaccine and a fatality rate ranging from 40 to 75 percent, according to the UN health body.

"In the past few weeks, three cases of Nipah — two in India and one in Bangladesh — made headlines and caused concern about a wider outbreak," WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a press conference in Geneva on Wednesday.

WHO assessed the risk of spread of Nipah virus regionally and globally and found it low, he added.

Two cases of Nipah were confirmed last month in India's West Bengal state while one patient died in Bangladesh last week after contracting the virus.

"The two outbreaks were not related, although both occurred along the India–Bangladesh border, and share some of the same ecological and cultural conditions, as well as populations of the species of fruit bat that are known to be the natural reservoir of Nipah virus," Tedros said.

Nipah was first identified in 1998 after it spread among pig farmers in Malaysia.

In India, the first Nipah outbreak was reported in West Bengal in 2001.

In 2018, at least 17 people died from Nipah in Kerala, and in 2023, two people died from the virus in the same southern Indian state.

Symptoms include intense fever, vomiting and a respiratory infection, but severe cases can involve seizures and brain inflammation that results in a coma.