After India reported two cases of the Nipah virus, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Friday that the risk of the virus spreading from the country is low and that it does not recommend any ...
There is a low risk of the deadly Nipah virus spreading from India, the World Health Organization said on Friday, adding that it did not recommend travel or trade curbs after two infections reported ...
Following reports of Nipah virus cases in India, the Director General of Health Sindh has issued a precautionary advisory, directing health authorities to ...
Confirmed cases of the Nipah virus in India have triggered swift action across the region, with health authorities emphasizing the importance of early ...
WHO says India’s Nipah virus cases are limited, with low risk of spread and no travel or trade curbs needed, even as some ...
Virus whose fatality rate can reach up to 75 per cent is said to be manageable and less likely to cause an outbreak in China ...
Low risk of Nipah virus spread from India. No need for travel, trade restrictions after India reports two nipah cases, the World Health Organisation said on Friday.
By Rishika Sadam HYDERABAD, Jan 30 (Reuters) - There is a low risk of the deadly Nipah virus spreading from India, the World ...
Nipah is a zoonotic virus first identified during a 1990s outbreak in Malaysia. It spreads through fruit bats, pigs and human ...
Recent cases have largely been detected in southern Kerala state. A major outbreak in 2018 killed at least 17 people there.
The World Health Organization reported two cases of a rare virus in an eastern Indian state on Thursday.
It’s a terrible disease. Around half the people who get severe Nipah virus infection die of it. The symptoms can vary in severity. It can cause pneumonia, just as COVID could. But the illness we worry ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results