Health authorities in India’s Kerala State have announced safety regulations for millions after a 14-year-old boy died from Nipah virus over the weekend.
Schools have been shut down and business hours limited in Pandikkad and the nearby area Anakkayam to prevent the spread of disease.
Nipah is a zoonotic virus transmitted to humans from certain animals and contaminated fruit and vegetables, particularly fruit bats, as well as other infected humans.
Symptoms include a fever, headaches, muscle pain, sore throat, drowsiness, dizziness, and vomiting.
There is currently no treatment or vaccine for the virus.
The teenager, who passed away after going into cardiac arrest, had allegedly consumed fruit from a property in the town visited by bats.
The Kerala Health Department is awaiting test results for 13 people who potentially contracted the disease, including the boy’s parents.
At a review meeting yesterday, Indian health minister Veena George said six of the individuals currently awaiting test results had displayed symptoms.
The virus was first recorded in Malaysia in 1999 and has since seen multiple outbreaks across India and Bangladesh.