City
Epaper

West Bengal nurse infected with Nipah virus dies of cardiac arrest, confirms health department

By ANI | Updated: February 12, 2026 21:25 IST

Kolkata (West Bengal) [India], February 12 : In a first for the decade, the nurse who was infected with ...

Open in App

Kolkata (West Bengal) [India], February 12 : In a first for the decade, the nurse who was infected with Nipah virus died of a cardiac arrest in West Bengal on Thursday, the state health department said.

Earlier, the state of West Bengal reported two confirmed cases of Nipah Virus Disease from December 2025 to date, according to reports from the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC).

Following confirmation of these two cases, the Government of India, in close coordination with the Government of West Bengal, promptly initiated comprehensive public health measures in accordance with established protocols.

A total of 196 contacts linked to the confirmed cases were identified, traced, monitored, and tested. All traced contacts have been found asymptomatic and have tested negative for Nipah Virus Disease, the release read.

The situation is being closely monitored, and all necessary public health measures are in place.

In response to the circulation of speculative and incorrect figures regarding Nipah Virus Disease (NiVD) in certain sections of the media, the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has advised the public and media to rely strictly on verified information from official sources.

Dr Rajeev Jayadevan, former President of IMA Cochin and Convener of the Research Cell, Kerala, on Monday warned that the Nipah virus spreads from bats to humans and can cause severe illness with a high mortality rate, stressing the importance of early detection to prevent further spread.

In a video message, Jayadevan said, "The initial symptoms are fever, body ache, headache, but in people who develop brain infection after that, they may get seizures or epilepsy, confusion, paralysis or coma. The symptoms are similar to those of other types of brain infection caused by other viruses. Sometimes a diagnosis of Nipah can be missed because it is not specifically tested for. The problem with Nipah is that it can also spread from patient to patient. So it's extremely important to identify the first patient who develops the infection," he added.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other Sports‘It was a day of missed chances,’ says India coach Vishal Uppal after loss to Indonesia in BJK Cup

BusinessDalcore Launches North India's First YOO-branded Residences 'The Falcon' in Gurugram, Brings YOO Inspired by Starck-designed Living to Delhi NCR

InternationalMiddle East conflict challenges Asia-Pacific resilience: ADB

TechnologyGold, silver decline nearly 1 pc as profit booking offsets demand

Other SportsGavaskar lauds 'fearless prodigies' Mukul & Badoni's 'unbelievable innings' in LSG win

National Realted Stories

NationalBengal PDS scam: ED conducting simultaneous raids at 12 locations

National"Owaisi and others adopt such tactics to help BJP": Sanjay Raut after AIMIM exits alliance ahead of Bengal polls

NationalSexual harassment at Nashik tech firm, company’s HR official arrested for inaction

NationalHimachal HC orders release of pension to former MLAs, sets one-month deadline with 6% interest clause

NationalDigital First: Over 5.72 lakh households embrace self-enumeration as Census 2027 gains momentum