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"textContent": "Airports around India have introduced Covid-era health screening (Picture: Reuters)\n\nA patient in Bangladesh died after contracting Nipah virus last month, the World Health Organization (WHO) has said.\n\nA small outbreak of the rare, brain-damaging virus flared in India in late January, sparking fears of an epidemic.\n\nWHO said Friday that the patient in Rajshahi first showed symptoms on January 21, including a fever and neurological problems.\n\nThe patient, aged between 40 and 50, also exhibited hypersalivation, disorientation and convulsion.\n\nDoctors confirmed she had Nipah virus after she was admitted to the hospital on January 28, where a team collected throat and blood samples.\n\n## What is Nipah virus?\n\nNipah virus persists in fruit bats across South and Southeast Asia and can spread to humans through contact with bodily fluids.\n\nThe virus, sometimes called NiV, was first identified during an outbreak in 1998 among pig farmers in Malaysia, where it killed over 100 people.\n\nSymptoms can develop up to 21 days after infection. They include flu-like symptoms, such as fevers, body aches and vomiting.\n\nOver time, however, it can cause respiratory syndrome and encephalitis, or brain inflammation.\n\nBetween 45% and 70% the people who are infected die. It has no vaccine and no cure.\n\nHealth officials said the patient had not travelled but eaten date palm sap, which can be infected by bats carrying the virus, earlier that month.\n\nAll 35 people who had contact with her are being monitored and have tested negative for the virus.\n\nBangladesh’s Institute of Epidemiology, Disease Control and Research confirmed to local news outlets bdnews24.com that this was the country’s first death from Nipah virus this year.\n\nNeighbouring India reported two cases of Nipah in West Nepal last month.\n\nIndian health officials aren’t sure how the pair became infected, but suspect they may have had sap while visiting the village of Ghughragachhi.\n\nCountries including Thailand, Nepal, Taiwan and Pakistan have rolled out Covid-style health checks in airports to help contain Nipah.\n\nTo view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video\n\nUp Next\n\nPrevious Page\n\nNext Page\n\nSap-loving fruit bats carry Nipah virus (Picture: Anuwar Hazarika/NurPhoto/Shutterstock)\n\nBangladesh banned the sale of date palm in 2011 amid a Nipah outbreak and has seen several infection waves in the years since.\n\nWHO said: ‘Bangladesh regularly has small NiV outbreaks, with cases reported at different times of the year, though outbreaks tend to occur between December and April, corresponding with the harvesting and consumption of date palm sap.’\n\nHarvesters, called gachis, climb date trees and shave the bark and leave clay pots to collect the sap.\n\nBut the fluid attracts fruit bats, which lap up the sap and may urinate or defecate in the pots, spreading the virus.\n\nWHO stressed that the risk of the virus spiralling into a pandemic – a disease that has spread worldwide – is low.\n\nDr Kaja Abbas, an associate professor at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, told **Metro** that the UK doesn’t have too much to worry about right now either.\n\nHe said: ‘The case fatality rate is high, between 40% and 75%, among people infected with the Nipah virus.\n\n‘However, the basic reproduction number (expected number of secondary infections from a primary case) for the Nipah virus is typically below one, suggesting limited human-to-human transmission and a low likelihood of widespread pandemic spread.’\n\n## What is the UK’s current guidance around Nipah virus?\n\nTo travellers, the UK Health Security Agency recommends people:\n\n * Practice good hand hygiene.\n * Avoid contact with bats and their environments, especially sick bats\n * Don’t consume raw or partially fermented date palm sap – always boil date palm juice first\n * Wash all fruit thoroughly with clean water and peel before eating\n * Wear protective clothing and gloves when handling sick animals and during slaughter and culling procedures.\n\n\n\n******Get in touch with our news team by emailing us atwebnews@metro.co.uk.******\n\n**For more stories like this,****check our news page**.\n\nComment now Comments Add Metro as a Preferred Source on Google Add as preferred source ",
"title": "Woman dies from brain-damaging Nipah virus in Bangladesh"
}