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After Goa, Now Monkey Fever Cases Detected in Maharashtra    

18 Feb, 2017 11:25 IST|Sakshi
Kyasanoor Forest Disease (KFD), was originally detected in Kyasanoor forest of Shimoga in Karnataka

Panaji: A string of Monkey Fever cases are now being detected from neighbouring Maharashtra after the disease left three dead and hundreds infected in Goa last year, according to state health officials.

Also, researchers say that Kyasanoor Forest Disease (KFD), which was originally detected in Kyasanoor forest of Shimoga in Karnataka, has been present all along the Western Ghats striking on farmers of Goa, Kerala and Maharashtra.

Three people died after being diagnosed with KFD in Goa's Sattari taluka last year which prompted the State Health department to undertaken a mass vaccination drive, covering more than 8,000 people in this remote area till date.

Kumar said this disease which was reported in 1957 in Shimoga has been prevalent in Maharashtra but was never detected in absence of the mechanism to diagnose the blood samples of victim farmers.
Manipal University’s Centre for Virus Research identified the cause of deaths as Monkey Fever

Now after much awareness on KFD, the farmers who are referred from Maharashtra's Sindhudurg area to Goa Medical College or District Hospital in Mapusa town, have been diagnosed positive for the disease.

Meanwhile, in Goa, KFD has continued plaguing Goa's Sattari taluka with 26 people testing positive for the ailment amongst the blood samples taken from 157 people at Community Health Centre in Valpoi town, 50 kms from Panaji.

While medical professionals groped in darkness over the cause of deaths, it was Kumar and the team of Manipal University’s Centre for Virus Research which identified the cause of deaths as Monkey Fever.

“The rate of KFD patients from Sattari has decreased but GMC and district hospital at Mapusa are increasingly getting patients from neighbouring Maharashtra," a senior official from Directorate of Health Services told PTI confirming that the disease has spread further in Western Ghats.

The Monkey Fever raised an alarm in Goa in 2014 when there was a sudden rise in deaths due to unidentified fever in Sattari's Pale village.

Although official records indicated that there was only one death, the villagers had claimed that every week one person used to die from their village.

While medical professionals groped in darkness over the cause of deaths, it was Kumar and the team of Manipal University's Centre for Virus Research which identified the cause of deaths as Monkey Fever.

The year after that saw Sattari's several villages getting affected with Monkey Fever. It usually spreads to human beings from dead carcass of monkeys usually lying in the cashew plantation.

The virus is carried from monkeys to humans by ticks.

In 2015-16, three persons died while 267 were detected positive for the disease forcing Goa government to initiate a mass vaccination program.

PTI

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