Вход на сайт

Просмотр новости

Найдите то, что Вас интересует

Child with Chandipura virus infection dies in Gujarat's Sabarkantha

Дата публикации: 09-07-2026 11:53:12

CHPV is a member of the Rhabdoviridae family and is known to cause sporadic cases and outbreaks of acute encephalitis syndrome

Основное содержимое страницы с новостью.

A six-year-old boy from Rajasthan with a confirmed Chandipura virus (CHPV) infection died at the civil hospital at Himmatnagar in Sabarkantha district of Gujarat, an official said on Thursday (July 9, 2026).

Seven suspected CHPV patients— all children between the ages of 2 and 11— were admitted to the hospital between June 26 and July 9, Resident Medical Officer (RMO) Dr. Vipul Jani said.

"A boy who died tested positive as per the result received on July 6. The test result of another child, who died yesterday, is awaited while the third deceased child tested negative for the virus," he said.

The deceased child with confirmed CHPV infection was identified as Rajkumar Damor (6), a resident of Udaipur in Rajasthan.

Two girls— a two-year-old from Rajasthan and a three-year-old from Sabarkantha— with suspected Chandipura virus infection are undergoing treatment and their reports were awaited. The report of a three-year-old boy tested negative and he was discharged, Dr. Jani said.

The parents of a three-year-old girl, whose report is awaited, left with her without doctors' permission.

The children were from Rajasthan as well as Banaskantha, Panchmahal and Sabarkantha districts of Gujarat, Dr. Jani said.

"A dedicated ward has been set up on the ground floor for the treatment of Chandipura virus cases," the RMO said.

CHPV is a member of the Rhabdoviridae family and is known to cause sporadic cases and outbreaks of acute encephalitis syndrome (AES) in western, central and southern parts of India, especially during the monsoon season.

It is transmitted by sandflies, mosquitoes and ticks, among other vectors. The CFR (case fatality rate) from the CHPV infection is high (56-75%) and there is no specific treatment or vaccine available.

In 2003, a large outbreak of AES was reported in Andhra Pradesh, with 329 suspected cases and 183 deaths. A study suggested CHPV was the cause.

Published - July 09, 2026 05:23 pm IST

Схожие новости

#Наименование новостиТональностьИнформативностьДата публикации
1В Приморье возбудили уголовное дело после гибели ребенка в машине скорой помощи0023-08-2019
2У вернувшегося из Индии жителя Воронежской области выявили холеру0026-04-2025
3Депздрав Москвы назвал причину смерти ребенка с положительным тестом на коронавирус0004-06-2020
4Multi-centric study to contain antimicrobial resistant neonatal sepsis begins in India0710-07-2026
5Следователи в Приморье начали проверку после гибели ребенка в машине скорой помощи0001-08-2019
6What is cyclosporiasis? A new parasitic outbreak is spreading across Michigan0501-07-2026
7Младенец умер в Саратовской области от пневмонии0019-05-2020
8Is Hantavirus Contagious? Outbreak Updates, Treatment Information & Mortality Rate0715-05-2026
9Globo: первый летальный за 20 лет случай геморрагической лихорадки зафиксирован в Бразилии0021-01-2020

Классификация: Происшествия. Схожих патентов: 0. Схожих новостей: 9. Тональность: -2. Информативность: 3. Источник: www.thehindu.com.