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Kerala To Launch Comprehensive Study For Frequent Nipah Outbreak: CM Pinarayi Vijayan

Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan has said that the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) is not providing a clear answer to why the virus outbreak repeatedly happens in the state’s Kozhikode.

Kerala CM Pinarayi Vijayan
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Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan has said that the state will conduct a seroprevalence study on the Nipah virus being repeatedly found in Kozhikode district.

According to WHO, population-based seroprevalence surveys are conducted to predict the proportion of infection and immunity in order to comprehend disease burden, a pattern of transmission, and associated risk factors.

The Chief Minister said that the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) is not providing a clear answer to why the virus outbreak repeatedly happens in Kozhikode, ANI report said.

“So the state has decided to conduct a sero survey. Have asked the health department to prepare a detailed proposal for this,” CM Vijayan was quoted in the report as having said in Thiruvananthapuram.

He further said that the state government is taking all measures to prevent the spread and ensure better treatment for those infected, the report mentioned.

“It cannot be said that the Nipah threat has gone away. It is a relief that the disease has not spread to more people. The government is going ahead with effective measures to prevent the spread and ensure better treatment for those infected. The entire health system of the state is involved in this initiative with utmost caution,” he said, the report mentioned.

The CM also added that scientific precautions have been taken to prevent the spread of Nipah in Kozhikode as well as neighbouring Kannur, Wayanad, and Malappuram districts, it said.

“A more dangerous situation was avoided because it was detected early. As soon as the abnormal fever was noticed, the government intervened and coordinated preventive measures,” the CM said, as per the report.

He said that a Nipah action plan was drawn up and a Nipah Core Committee comprising 19 teams was formed, it added.

“Nipah control room is set up in government guest house, Kozhikode. A call centre was opened and linked to the 'Disha' service of the Health Department,” he added, the report said.

On the number of infected persons and contact list, the CM said, “1286 people are included in the contact list. 276 of them belong to the high-risk category. 122 of them are family members and relatives of the patients. 118 health workers are on the contact list. 994 people are under observation,” it said.

The Chief Minister said that so far, samples of 304 people with symptoms of the disease have been collected, it said.

Earlier on Monday, Health Minister Veena George said that no fresh cases of the Nipah virus were reported in the state as 61 samples taken of ‘high-risk’ contacts including healthcare workers tested negative, the report mentioned.

She further said that the Nipah strain found in Kerala has been identified as the Indian Genotype, or I Genotype, which is similar to the strain found in Bangladesh, it said.

Six cases of the Nipah virus have been so far found in the state of which two persons died while four others, including a nine-year-old boy, are under treatment, it said.

The health minister said that ICMR and WHO had conducted studies and found that Kerala and eight other states in India have the probability of Nipah occurrence, it stated.

Meanwhile, the district administration in Kozhikode has relaxed the restrictions in the district as no new cases of Nipah virus infection were reported in the state, it said.