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While Nipah virus has got the entire country worried, there are a lot of false whatsapp forwards doing the rounds which claim to treat this virus.
The latest is the one which claims that ‘making a concoction of 6 parijatha/night jasmine leaves is an immediate medicine for Nipah virus’.
It’s fake news you don’t need to trust.
Let us explain how Nipah virus actually works and why you must never believe such whatsapp forwards.
Nipah virus is fairly new. The virus was first identified in 1998 in Malaysia and pigs were identified as the intermediate host. It spread to humans after they came in contact with pig feces and excretions.
Later Nipah virus showed up in Bangladesh in 2004, where humans became infected with NiV as a result of consuming date palm sap that had been contaminated by infected fruit bats.
The death toll from the latest outbreak in Kerala rose to 16 on Sunday.
Kerala Health Minister K.K. Shailaja had said that out of the 18 who had tested positive for Nipah, 16 had died but the remaining two were recovering.
A global coalition set up a year ago to fight epidemics has struck a USD 25 million deal with two US biotech companies to accelerate work on a vaccine against the brain-damaging Nipah virus that has killed 16 people in India.
The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) said on 31 May that Profectus BioSciences and Emergent BioSolutions would receive up to USD 25 million to advance development and manufacturing of a shot for the bat-borne disease. But the vaccine is atleast 5 years away.
Now let’s examine the Whatsapp message that’s floating around.
As per some studies, parijatha leaves have anti-oxidant, anti-inflammatory, anti-pyretic, anti-microbial properties and is considered an important element in Ayurveda.
Another paper published in the Biomedical and Pharmacology Journal states that ‘Parijatha or night jasmine is useful in diseases of spleen enlargement, round worm infestation, sciatica, fevers, bronchitis, rheumatism, arthritis, skin diseases, hepatic disorders, haemorrhoids.’
Talking about the properties of parijatha leaves, Dr Partap Chauhan, Director of Jiva Ayurveda, says:
But can it help you against Nipah virus?
Dr Ashwini Setya, Gastroenterologist and Programme Director at Delhi’s Max Super Speciality Hospital has a similar take. He says:
So should one consume such a concoction as a medicine against Nipah virus?
Dr Ashwini Setya feels it’s incorrect to make such claims:
So instead of forwarding fake news on Whatsapp, you could help spread awareness by sharing some factual information.
(With media inputs.)
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Published: 04 Jun 2018,05:19 PM IST