Nipah virus outbreaks have been reported in Malaysia, Singapore, Bangladesh, and India. The area is known as the Nipah Belt. The highest mortality due to Nipah virus infection was found in Bangladesh, where outbreaks are typically seen in winter. Nipah virus
was first seen in 1998 in peninsular Malaysia in pigs and pig farmers. By mid-1999, more than 265 human cases of encephalitis, including 105 deaths, had been reported in Malaysia, and 11 cases of either encephalitis or respiratory illness with one fatality were reported in Singapore. In 2001, Nipah virus was reported from
Meherpur District, Bangladesh and
Siliguri, India. The
Malaysian health authorities at first thought
Japanese encephalitis (JE) was the cause of infection which hampered the deployment of effective measures to prevent the spread of Nipah virus. 75% of patients were either hospital staff or had visited one of the other patients in hospital, indicating person-to-person transmission. • 2001: April–May,
Meherpur District, Bangladesh: 13 cases with nine fatalities (69% mortality). • 2003: January,
Naogaon District, Bangladesh: 12 cases with eight fatalities (67% mortality). • 2007: February–May,
Nadia District, India: up to 50 suspected cases with 3–5 fatalities. The outbreak site borders the Bangladesh district of
Kushtia, where eight cases of Nipah virus encephalitis with five fatalities occurred during March and April 2007. This was preceded by an outbreak in
Thakurgaon during January and February affecting seven people with three deaths. All three outbreaks showed evidence of person-to-person transmission. • 2008: February–March, Manikganj and Rajbari districts, Bangladesh: Nine cases with eight fatalities. • 2010: January, Bhanga subdistrict, Faridpur, Bangladesh: Eight cases with seven fatalities. During March, one physician of the Faridpur Medical College Hospital caring for confirmed Nipah cases died. • 2011: February: An outbreak of Nipah Virus occurred at Hatibandha, Lalmonirhat, Bangladesh. The deaths of 21 schoolchildren due to Nipah virus infection were recorded on 4 February 2011.
IEDCR confirmed the infection was due to this virus. Local schools were closed for one week to prevent the spread of the virus. People were also requested to avoid the consumption of uncooked fruits and fruit products. Such foods, contaminated with urine or saliva from infected fruit bats, were the most likely source of this outbreak. •
2018: May: Deaths of twenty one people in
Perambra near
Calicut,
Kerala, India were confirmed to be due to the virus. Treatment using antivirals such as Ribavirin was initiated. • 2019: June: A 23-year-old student was admitted into hospital with Nipah virus infection at
Kochi in Kerala. Health Minister of Kerala
K. K. Shailaja said that 86 people who had had recent interactions with the patient were under observation. This included two nurses who treated the patient, and had a fever and sore throat. The situation was monitored and precautionary steps were taken to control the spread of virus by the
Central and
State Government. •
2021: September: 12-year-old boy, a native of
Chathamangalam village was admitted to a hospital at
Kozhikode in Kerala on 1 September. He died from the virus four days after admission. Two healthcare workers who came into contact with the victim were already showing symptoms of Nipah infection by Monday. • 2023: Since 4 January 2023 and as of 13 February 2023, 11 cases (10 confirmed and one probable), including eight deaths (Case Fatality Rate (CFR) 73%), have been reported in Bangladesh. WHO assesses the ongoing risk as high at the national level. • 2023: September:
Kozhikode district,
Kerala, India: As of 14 September 2023, five cases, including two deaths, were confirmed in Kozhikode district in Kerala. The government has prepared a contact list of over 700 people linked to the two deaths, of whom two family members and a healthcare worker tested positive for the virus. • 2024: July: One person died and 60 were identified as at risk of infection in
Malappuram district,
Kerala,
India. • 2026: January: The health authorities in
West Bengal, India, responded to a confirmed Nipah virus outbreak following the report of five cases, including healthcare workers, as the outbreak placed multiple Asian countries on high alert, prompting enhanced screening and surveillance measures in the region due to the virus's high fatality rate. == Research ==