Sunday, January 25, 2026 Indian health authorities are responding to a Nipah virus outbreak after five confirmed cases of the incurable disease were detected in West Bengal, near the state capital Kolkata.
Officials said three new infections were confirmed this
week, involving a doctor, a nurse, and another health worker, according to the
Press Trust of India. Two nurses, a male and a female, had earlier tested
positive after working at Narayana Multispeciality Hospital in Barasat, about
15 miles north of Kolkata.
West Bengal’s principal secretary for health and family
welfare, Narayan Swaroop Nigam, said one of the nurses is in critical condition
and currently in a coma after developing high fever and respiratory
complications between New Year’s Eve and January 2. Authorities believe the
nurse contracted the virus while treating a patient with severe respiratory
symptoms who later died before tests were carried out.
So far, about 180 people have been tested, while 20
high-risk contacts have been placed under quarantine as containment measures
intensify.
Nipah virus is a bat-borne disease that spreads from animals
to humans and can also be transmitted between people. Fruit bats are the
natural hosts and are common across India. In humans, the infection can range
from asymptomatic cases to severe respiratory illness and brain inflammation,
with symptoms including fever, headache, muscle pain, vomiting, and sore
throat. In severe cases, encephalitis can lead to coma within 24 to 48 hours.
The virus has a fatality rate of between 40 and 75 per cent,
and there is currently no approved treatment or vaccine. The World Health
Organization has classified Nipah as a priority pathogen due to its potential
to trigger an epidemic.
India has recorded Nipah cases almost every year for more
than two decades, with repeated outbreaks in the southern state of Kerala,
where dozens have died since 2018. Health experts say the risk of infection can
be reduced by avoiding contact with bats and pigs and by not consuming raw date
palm sap, which may have been contaminated by bats.

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