| Relevance: GS-II Health & Social Sector · GS-III Sci-Tech & Disease · GS-I Geography | Source: Kerala Nipah update, June 2026 |
1 · What happened
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Kerala has confirmed a fresh case of the Nipah virus (NiV) in Kozhikode (June 2026); the patient is critically ill, and the state is on high alert. This is not new for Kerala. Since its first outbreak in 2018 — South India’s first ever — Nipah has come back almost every year. The World Health Organization (WHO) lists it among its high-threat “priority pathogens” because it is highly deadly, hard to predict, and could trigger a wider outbreak. |
2 · What is Nipah, and how does it spread?
| Nipah is a bat-borne virus. It starts like a flu (fever, headache) but can quickly turn serious — causing encephalitis (swelling of the brain) and breathing failure. There is no specific cure or vaccine yet; care is mainly supportive, which is why it is so feared. |
- How it jumps to people: by eating fruit or raw palm sap contaminated by bat saliva or droppings, or through contact with infected animals.
- Person-to-person too: unlike many animal viruses, Nipah can pass between people through body fluids — especially in hospitals. In 2018, one patient infected about 16 others, largely in a hospital.
- Deadly record: the 2018 outbreak had 23 cases and a fatality rate of about 90% — only two people survived. (India’s earlier outbreaks were in West Bengal in 2001 and 2007.)
3 · Why Kerala keeps facing it
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The source
The bat reservoir
The Indian flying fox (a fruit bat, Pteropus) naturally carries the virus across the Western Ghats. It can never be fully wiped out.
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The trigger
Shrinking forests
Deforestation and orchards push homes right up to forest edges. A KFRI study found almost all bat-roosting sites lie near human settlements.
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The danger window
April to September
Risk peaks when fruit is plentiful and bats breed and forage more — shedding more virus. This is when to avoid fallen fruit and raw palm sap.
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The response
One Health watch
Kerala uses One Health — joining human, animal and environment health — with grassroots volunteers reporting unusual animal deaths early.
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4 · Kerala’s playbook (and the way ahead)
- Catch it early: doctors keep a high “index of suspicion” for unusual brain-fever cases, so clusters are spotted fast.
- Stop hospital spread: after 2018’s hospital-driven spread, strict infection-control is enforced in wards.
- Research & testing: a One Health Centre for Nipah research (Kozhikode, 2023) and work with the National Institute of Virology on antibodies; more BSL-3 high-safety labs are needed in the north.
- Prevent, don’t just react: protect bat habitats with buffer zones (via the MoEFCC) and run year-round public awareness in the risk season.
| UPSC Value Box | ||||||||||||||
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| MCQ Practice Question |
Q. With reference to the Nipah virus (NiV), consider the following statements:
Which of the statements given above is/are correct? |
Answer: (a) 1 and 2 only
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