
In Karnataka, KFD peaks; vaccine efforts stalled Premium
The Hindu
Karnataka struggles with Kyasanur Forest Disease outbreak, highlighting the need for a vaccine amidst private manufacturers’ reluctance.
Karnataka’s Minister for Health and Family Welfare Dinesh Gundu Rao, while answering a question on manufacturing a vaccine for Kyasanur Forest Disease (KFD), a viral infection, during the legislature session in December 2023, said that private manufacturers were not showing any interest in taking it up. The reason for the companies’ reluctance, he said, was that the number of people getting infected by the disease was too small and it does not make business sense for them, given the investment required for the research and development of a vaccine. This underlined the limitations of relying on private players in matters of serious public health issues.
Since the Minister made this statement, two people have died due to the disease in Karnataka. From January 1 to February 18, as many as 103 people have contracted the infection in three districts of Shivamogga, Uttara Kannada and Chikkamagaluru in Karnataka, stressing the need for an effective vaccination to contain this tick-borne disease. The positivity rate stands at 2.52 and the fatality rate at 1.94.
The disease has a history dating back to 1956 when it was first noticed in the Kyasanur forest areas of Sorab taluk in the hilly Shivamogga district. It has been named after the place. Since then, many experts have conducted research on its origin, spread, and impact on health. The disease is also known as “monkey fever”, as it also affects monkeys. too. The death of monkeys serves as a forecast for the KFD outbreak. Studies have shown that it spreads through tick bites. The ticks that come into contact with KFD-affected monkeys carry the disease to human habitats.
Also Read | Kyasanur Forest Disease: The assault of the tick
For the first 15 years, the disease was confined to Shivamogga district. However, gradually, it has spread to other areas. Outside Shivamogga, It was noticed in Uttara Kannada district in 1972. Later, cases started being reported from Koppa in Chikkamagaluru, in 1980. By 1982, cases were reported in Dakshina Kannada district. It was traced in Chamarajanagara in the Old Mysore region in 2012. Then, in Belagavi in 2016, reached Gadag in 2017 (both in north Karnataka), and cases were reported in Mysuru and Hassan districts in 2019.
The virus has shown its presence in neighbouring States as well. An autopsy of a dead monkey in the Nilgiri district of Tamil Nadu in 2012 showed KFD virus. Six people were infected with the disease in Wayanad and Malappuram, Kerala, in 2013–14. An outbreak of KFD was reported in north Goa in 2015-16. Maharashtra also reported KFD cases in 2016.
The number of people who have died since 1956 is above 560. The highest number of deaths in a year was reported in 1983 (110) and 1984 (171), forcing the government to give approval for the manufacture of a vaccine to avoid the spread of the disease.

The Central Committee of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) on Friday pledged to mobilise people in resistance against the BJP-led Union government’s “anti-agricultural worker, anti-farmer, anti-worker, anti-people” laws and policies till they are all repealed, the party said on Friday. In a statement issued here, the CPI(M) said the members took the pledge following a three-day meeting held at Thiruvananthapuram.

Expressing the need for more number of socially responsive engineers and lawyers for furthering development of the country, Governor Thaawarchad Gehlot here on Friday lauded St. Aloysius institution for widening its service in the education sector by opening separate institutes for engineering and law











