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Nine-Year-Old Kerala Girl Dies From Rare Brain-Eating Amoeba Infection

Nine-Year-Old Kerala Girl Dies From Rare Brain-Eating Amoeba Infection
Nine-year-old Kerala girl dies from rare brain-eating amoeba infection (Representational)

Highlights

  1. A nine-year-old girl died from amoebic encephalitis in north Kerala district
  2. She was admitted with fever on August 13 and died on August 14 at medical college
  3. Tests confirmed the brain infection was caused by free-living amoeba in water

A nine-year-old girl who died at the medical college here two days ago was due to amoebic encephalitis, a rare brain infection caused by free-living amoeba in contaminated waters, health officials in this north Kerala district confirmed on Saturday.

A senior health official said that the girl was admitted to a hospital due to fever on August 13, but as her condition worsened quickly, she was shifted to the Kozhikode medical college on August 14 where she died the same day.

A test carried out at the microbiology lab of the medical college revealed late Friday night that the cause of the girl's death was amoebic encephalitis, the official said.

The search is on to identify the water body, such as a pond or lake, from where the child, a resident of Thamarassery, contracted the pathogen, he said.

"Once the water body is identified, we will look for those who may have bathed in it recently," he added.

The official said it was probably the fourth case of the rare brain infection reported from the district this year.

Caused by free-living amoeba, amoebic encephalitis is a deadly infection that is typically contracted from freshwater sources such as lakes, rivers, and streams.
 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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About The Campaign

NDTV in partnership with UBER is launching a sustained campaign 'Roshan Dilli'  to try and raise safety standards in India's capital, New Delhi.

Our focus is to try and improve lighting in public spaces in the city. Lighting is a key factor in shaping women's perceptions of safety

The initiative will provide a platform for all stakeholders to discuss our goal of improving safety standards, to start a conversation about safety of women in the country

It will also highlight various interventions and solutions that help to make women safe and put the spotlight on what more can be done.

The campaign will accentuate the need for Safety to be a shared responsibility

The need for gender sensitization and how law enforcement and civil society through checks and education can try and make women safer

We hope you will join us and help make New Delhi a safer city for women.

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