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Nipah virus is a bat-borne (zoonotic) RNA virus that can spill over into humans and cause severe disease. First identified in Malaysia in 1998, it has caused repeated outbreaks in South Asia through animal contact, contaminated date palm sap, and limited person-to-person spread. Symptoms can start like the flu but may progress to brain inflammation and severe respiratory disease. There is currently no licensed vaccine or cure — treatment is supportive — though researchers are testing monoclonal antibodies and experimental vaccines. Environmental change may also play a role. Habitat disruption, agricultural expansion, and shifting ecological patterns can increase contact between fruit bats and humans, raising the risk of spillover events. As a zoonotic RNA virus with limited human-to-human transmission, Nipah remains under global surveillance. Because Nipah can spread between people and could evolve over time, prevention is key: safer food practices, avoiding sick animals, and strong infection control in hospitals. Stay informed. Stay safe. 🦠 🔔 Follow for more science, simplified—one pill at a time. 💊 #NipahVirus #ZoonoticDisease #OneHealth #GlobalHealth #PandemicPreparedness #EmergingViruses #InfectiousDisease #PublicHealth #ScienceCommunication #BatBorneVirus #OutbreakPrevention #HealthEducation [citation] Luby, S. P. (2013). The pandemic potential of Nipah virus. Antiviral Research, 100(1), 38–43. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.antiviral.2... Nipah virus infection - Bangladesh. (2026, February 6). World Health Organization. https://www.who.int/emergencies/disea... Tan, F. H., Sukri, A., Idris, N., Ong, K. C., Schee, J. P., Tan, C. T., Tan, S. H., Wong, K. T., Wong, L. P., Tee, K. K., & Chang, L. (2024b). A systematic review on Nipah virus: global molecular epidemiology and medical countermeasures development. Virus Evolution, 10(1), veae048. https://doi.org/10.1093/ve/veae048 World Health Organization: WHO. (2026, January 29). Nipah virus. https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sh...