India reports first case of mpox
Patient is a 38-year-old man who had travelled from the United Arab Emirates
NEW DELHI: India said on Monday that an mpox case involving a man in the southern state of Kerala was from the fast-spreading clade 1b variety, marking South Asia’s first recorded case from the new strain.
Health Ministry spokesperson Manisha Verma confirmed the strain after news agency ANI cited official sources as saying that the mpox case reported in the Malappuram district of Kerala last week belonged to clade 1.
The patient is a 38-year-old man who had travelled from the United Arab Emirates and had been admitted to the government medical college hospital in the district, Kerala authorities said last week.
About 29 friends and family members of the patient along with 37 passengers on his flight are being monitored at home but none of them have shown any mpox symptoms so far, Malappuram district’s nodal officer, Dr. Shubin C, said on Monday.
The office of the Kerala state health minister did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for details of the case.India, the world’s most populous nation, had so far not reported an mpox case from the new strain but federal authorities had issued an advisory this month to all states to remain vigilant and be prepared to address potential cases.
The caution followed the rapid spread that prompted the World Health Organisation to declare the outbreak a global health emergency after the new offshoot, first identified in the Democratic Republic of Congo, began spreading to neighbouring countries.
India had reported about 30 cases and one death from the older strain, known as clade 2, between 2022 and March this year, and one more clade 2 case earlier this month.Two strains of mpox are now spreading in Congo - the endemic form of the virus, clade 1, and the new clade 1b strain, with the term ‘clade’ referring to a form of the virus.
Mpox transmits through close physical contact, including sexual contact, but unlike previous global pandemics such as Covid-19 there is no evidence it spreads easily through the air.It typically causes flu-like symptoms and pus-filled lesions, and is usually mild but can kill.
-
Gigi Hadid's Brother Mourns Companion Who Helped Save His Life -
Timothee Chalamet Makes Shocking Claim About Performing Bob Dylan Songs On 'SNL' -
Sarah Ferguson Took Daughters To Visit Jeffrey Epstein Before Crude Email -
Why Halle Berry Trusted Former Teacher With Such Big Role In Her Kids' Lives? -
Selena Gomez Celebrates Major Milestone For Personal Brand -
Kristen Stewart Breaks Silence On Her 2017 'SNL' Monologue -
Leonardo DiCaprio, Vittoria Ceretti's Relationship Enters Choppy Waters: 'Will She Keep Paying The Price?' -
Derek Hough Says Wife Hayley Asked THIS To Doctors Post Craniectomy -
Trump Announces US-India Trade Deal After Modi Agrees To Stop Buying Russian Oil -
Startling Truth About Prince Harry’s Finances Breaks Free: ‘He’s Got Nothing Literally’ -
Beyoncé Accused Of Overlooking Jay-Z's 'creepy' Behavior While Greeting Meghan Markle -
Taylor Swift Watches On As Relationship With Travis Kelce Gets Put To The Test With -
West Virginia Woman Arrested Over Inciting ‘Trump Assassination’ -
Brooklyn Beckham Put On Blast Publically: ‘You Never Would Have Landed Nicola Peltz’ -
King Charles Called Out For ‘pseudo-stripping’ Andrew Of Royal Titles -
Reba McEntire Gives Update On Kelly Clarkson, Her Kids After Brandon Blackstock's Death