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Kerala reports seventh Nipah outbreak since 2018

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Kerala reports seventh Nipah outbreak since 2018


All seven high-risk individuals closely connected to the affected person have tested negative for Nipah.

On May 8, a new case of Nipah virus was confirmed in Kerala in a 42-year-old woman from Valanchery in Malappuram district. On May 6, testing for the Nipah virus was first undertaken at the Calicut Medical College. When the tested samples were positive for Nipah, a sample was sent to the National Institute of Virology (NIV), Pune on May 7 afternoon for Nipah confirmation. The NIV confirmed Nipah on May 8 afternoon.

According to Dr. T.S. Anish, Nodal Officer, Kerala One Health, Centre for Nipah Research and Resilience, and Professor of Community Medicine at Government Medical College, Kozhikode, samples tested using Truenat came positive for the Nipah virus. To confirm the result, samples were tested in the microbiology lab using RT-PCR. Only the urine sample tested positive for the Nipah virus, says Dr. Anish.

According to him, blood and throat swab samples did not test positive for the Nipah virus. “This may be because of the late stage of viraemic infection. Viruses do not persist in the body for long and hence the blood and throat swab samples did not test positive for the virus, while the urine sample alone tested positive,” he says.

Samples collected from the infected person’s contacts were tested at the Manjeri Government Medical College in Malappuram district. All seven high-risk individuals closely connected to the woman tested negative for Nipah on May 8.

The patient had minor symptoms on April 25, and presented with worsened clinical symptoms on May 1 and was admitted to the EMS Hospital at Perinthalmanna. Her condition worsened by noon the following day and was shifted to the critical care intensive care unit, intubated and ventilated. She exhibited acute encephalitis syndrome and had classic symptoms of dengue. She tested positive for dengue and hence Nipah was not suspected. It was only when her condition did not improve that samples were sent for Nipah testing two days later.

Two outbreaks in 2024

The Nipah outbreak now reported is the seventh instance in Kerala. The first outbreak was reported in 2018, followed by outbreaks in 2019, 2021, 2023 and 2024. Last year, Kerala reported two Nipah outbreaks — July 21 in a 14-year-old boy and the second one on September 15 in a 24-year-old adult. Both outbreaks in 2024 were in Malappuram district.

With the May 8 outbreak, there have been three Nipah outbreaks in Malappuram district in all.



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It is time to protect India’s workers from the heat

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In the first week of April 2025, Delhi crossed a dangerous threshold: the temperature soared above 41°C, and nights offered little relief. These extreme conditions are no longer outliers but part of a new, deadly normal. With climate change intensifying year after year, Indian cities have become the epicentre of a growing crisis.

And while heatwaves affect everyone, it is India’s millions of urban informal workers who are bearing the brunt of this slow-moving disaster. The Reserve Bank of India has pointed out, in 2024, that extreme heat threatens the health and livelihoods of occupationally exposed people, potentially causing a projected 4.5% loss to India’s GDP. Despite their considerable contribution, essential roles and sheer numbers, they are consistently excluded from the planning and implementation of urban heat response strategies. This exclusion has deadly consequences.

Key challenges in current Heat Action Plans

Many Indian cities now have Heat Action Plans (HAPs), inspired by pioneering efforts as in Ahmedabad. These plans, guided by the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), are meant to prepare cities for increasingly frequent and intense heatwaves. Yet, more than a decade later, most HAPs remain perfunctory, underfunded and poorly coordinated.

A review of HAPs across India reveals a consistent worrying pattern: informal workers are largely invisible. Worse, most treat heatwaves as temporary — short-term disasters instead of the symptoms of a deeper climate crisis that demands long-term, structural responses. The NDMA’s 2019 heat wave guidelines do not mention informal workers explicitly, but generally, under the category of outdoor workers and vulnerable groups. At the State level, most HAPs lack protocols for occupational safety, hydration, cooling spaces, shade provision or even a mention of compensation for lost work. City-level plans take a generalised public health and awareness approach, neglecting livelihood impacts. HAPs in India also suffer from fragmented governance and institutional silos. The Ministries of Labour, Environment, Urban Affairs and Health operate independently in the absence of guidelines at the central level, resulting in disjointed and inconsistent protections for workers. Moreover, city HAPs often remain short term, immediate for summer months, crisis-oriented documents. City heat actions rarely integrate long-term strategies such as urban cooling, heat-resilient infrastructure, working conditions, flexible work norms, or worker-focused social protection

Globally, cities are adopting worker protections against rising heat. In the U.S., California and Oregon mandate employers to provide water, shade, rest breaks, and heat safety training. France’s “Plan Canicule” requires work adjustments, hydration during heat alerts, and opened public buildings and spaces to the public for cooling off. In Qatar and Australia, outdoor work is restricted during peak heat, and employers are obligated to assess and mitigate heat risks. India, too, offers examples. Ahmedabad’s HAP introduced adjusted working hours and shaded rest areas. Odisha mandates a halt to outdoor work during peak hours. These good practices and innovations do offer replicable, worker-centric models for adapting urban livelihoods to extreme heat.

Towards a worker-centric response

We urgently need a new kind of urban heat response: one that is worker-centred, just, and grounded in lived realities.

First, the NDMA’s 2019 Heat Guidelines must be updated to explicitly include informal workers. A revised framework must map occupational vulnerabilities distinctly for varied workers —whether it is for construction workers, street vendors, waste pickers, gig workers or rickshaw pullers — and provide actionable protocols for city and State governments that may use them contextually. This includes defining safe working hours, mandatory rest breaks, access to water, and emergency response mechanisms.

Second, is the mandate for worker participation in the creation of city and State HAPs. These cannot remain top-down exercises. Every municipal body must engage worker collectives, unions, and worker welfare boards in co-creating occupation-specific plans. Constituting civil society and community coordination groups at the city level is key. Local wisdom and the involvement of workers’ associations in co-producing solutions makes policies more realistic, responsive, and respected.

Third, informal workers deserve the right to shade, rest, and cooling. We need to establish shaded rest zones, hydration points and community cooling centres in key locations — markets, transport hubs, public spaces, labour chowks, construction sites. Open public buildings, malls and open spaces as cooling centres. These must be accessible, gender-sensitive, and co-maintained by workers and the local community. It is time to develop norms, guidelines, institutionalise protections and allocate dedicated budgets for this.

Fourth, innovative financing — through corporate social responsibility, or dedicated city development budgets —must support local solutions as adaptations. Health insurance must be expanded to cover heat-related illnesses, especially for those in informal occupations who are typically excluded from mainstream schemes. And yes, community-neighbourhood contribution and involvement are a must and should be woven in action plans. Cool roofs, shaded walkways and passive ventilation must become standard practices, not just pilots.

As a part of city design and governance

Fifth, this leads to a bigger shift: embedding heat resilience and worker safety into how we design and govern our cities. Heat adaptation and worker inclusion must be legally written into master plans, building bye-laws, and infrastructure codes. Cities must promote natural shade through urban forests and tree corridors, while also planning blue networks such as water bodies and public resting spaces. Informal workspaces such as vendor markets, waste depots and labour chowks must be retrofitted with materials and design strategies that ensure thermal comfort.

Sixth, at the national level, we need an inter-ministerial task force on climate and work, bringing together the Ministries of Labour and Employment, Housing and Urban Affairs, Environment, Forest and Climate Change and Health, with of course NDMA, and State Disaster Management Authorities. This task force must develop an integrated road map linking climate resilience with worker protection and labour codes. It must guide cities, coordinate efforts, and ensure accountability. Every city and district must appoint a dedicated heat officer — someone empowered to manage and monitor heat response measures and work across departments.

For informal workers, the climate crisis is not a distant threat. It is a present and daily struggle. The cost of inaction is no longer measured only in degrees — it is measured in lives, in lost livelihood and poor health, and, in burdened futures.

Aravind Unni is an urban practitioner and researcher working on building resilience for informal workers and urban communities. Shalini Sinha is Asia Strategic Lead, Urban Policies Program, Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO)



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‘India’s healthy life expectancy lags a decade behind total lifespan’

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Experts at the Indian Institute of Public Health during the convocation ceremony of Masters of Public Health batch on Friday.
| Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

India’s life expectancy stands at approximately 73.4 years, the healthy life expectancy is almost a decade shorter, said K. Srinath Reddy, honorary distinguished professor at the Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI).

Speaking at the convocation ceremony of the Master of Public Health (MPH) programme at the Indian Institute of Public Health (IIPH) in Hyderabad on Friday, Dr. Reddy highlighted the need for a sustained approach to public health. A total of 38 students from the 2022-24 MPH batch graduated on Friday.

“The loss of healthy years is not confined to the final decade of life, it is the cumulative result of health burdens across the entire life course. This calls for corrective measures through public health interventions, which must engage not only the health sector but also education, housing, environment, and transportation,” he said.

Echoing this sentiment, Zelalem Tafesse, Chief of UNICEF’s Field Office for Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, and Karnataka, reminded graduates that public health is deeply intertwined with economics, governance, gender equity, climate change, and infrastructure.

“Even the national budget and market trends influence health outcomes,” Tafesse said, warning that misinformation in the digital age has become a serious public health threat.

Highlighting the growing role of digital technologies and Artificial Intelligence in shaping the future, Tafesse encouraged graduates to harness their digital fluency to drive solutions. “You are better equipped than my generation to thrive in this digital era. Let your public health knowledge grow with the tools of tomorrow,” he said.

Addressing the graduates, IIPH-H Director Anil Kaul underscored the increasing significance of their chosen field. “You are stepping into a world grappling with global health crises and complex challenges. Your work has never been more important. This field demands innovation, resilience, and a commitment to equity and justice,” he said.



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IPL, Interrupted: Looking Back At The Tournament’s Past Disruptions – Forbes India

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Cricket fans stand outside the Ekana Cricket Stadium in Lucknow on May 9, 2025, after the Indian Premier League (IPL) Twenty20 cricket tournament was suspended for a week following the cross-border tensions between India and Pakistan. Image: Arun SANKAR / AFP

As India-Pakistan border tensions rise, the BCCI has put the IPL on hold for a week. While 58 matches have been completed in the season, the plan for the remaining 12 in the business end “will be announced in due course in consultation with relevant authorities and stakeholders”, Devajit Saikia, the honorary secretary of the BCCI, said in a press release.

This is not the first time, though, that the IPL has been disrupted. In its 18-year history, the tournament has been shifted out of the country four times, faced scrutiny over match-fixing, and has seen two of its teams being banned. Add to that the fact that Lalit Modi, the former IPL commissioner, who is known to have masterminded the tournament, was ousted and barred for life by the BCCI following allegations of corruption and misappropriation of funds.

Here’s a timeline capturing IPL’s restive journey:

  • 2008: IPL launched
  • 2009: Moved to South Africa due to the Lok Sabha elections
  • 2010: Lalit Modi, then IPL commissioner, investigated for corruption, suspended
  • 2012: Kochi Tuskers terminated after one season due to financial issues
  • 2013: Allegations of spot-fixing and betting surface—three RR players and a top CSK official arrested; BCCI bans Lalit Modi for life over earlier allegations; Pune Warriors terminated after three seasons following financial issues;
  • 2014: 20 matches played in the UAE as the tournament coincided with the general elections
  • 2015: RR and CSK banned as allegations of spot-fixing proved; Pune SuperGiants and Gujarat Lions replace them for 2016 and 2017 seasons
  • 2020: Played in the UAE due to Covid restrictions
  • 2021: First phase played in April-May suspended due to Covid, concluding phase held in the UAE in Sept-Oct
  • 2025: Suspended for a week due to escalating India-Pak tensions



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