SUNDAY, Feb. 8, 2026 (HealthDay News) — Reports of new Nipah virus cases in India have raised worries about yet another ...
Nipah is a deadly virus with no vaccine or cure and considered a high-risk pathogen by the World Health Organization ...
Two cases of the Nipah virus have been detected in India, prompting a raft of screening measures to be enacted in countries across Asia.
A YOUNG nurse has died after catching Nipah, a virus that has been dubbed the ‘next pandemic threat’. The 25-year-old was one of two confirmed cases in eastern India and succumbed to the bat-borne ...
A WOMAN has died from Nipah, a brain-swelling virus spread by bats that has been dubbed the ‘next pandemic threat’. The case ...
The World Health Organization (WHO) says there is a low risk that the deadly Nipah virus will spread beyond India, where two people tested positive.
The Nipah virus was spotted in India where it infected two people. No cases of the potentially lethal virus have been detected in the United States.
India reports first Nipah death of latest outbreak but says no new cases detected - Nurse, 25, was one of two confirmed cases in South Asian country ...
As the infection develops, some patients may also develop a serious complication known as encephalitis - an inflammation of the brain which can prove fatal.
The deadly rare virus has no known cure.
In late January 2026, Indian authorities confirmed two new Nipah virus cases in West Bengal state. Following the news, a video circulated on social media in Africa purportedly showing Uganda’s health ...
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