The Nipah virus has once again drawn international attention after reports of new cases in India and the revelation of its strikingly high fatality rate. With airports in parts of Asia stepping up screening measures, many people are asking the same question: Could Nipah be the next global pandemic?
An infectious disease expert has weighed in—and her answer offers important context and reassurance.

Why Nipah Is Back in the Headlines
Concerns intensified following an outbreak in West Bengal, India, where two confirmed cases were reported in December. According to India’s health ministry, both individuals were healthcare workers. Nearly 200 people who had close contact with them were traced and tested, all of whom returned negative results.
Despite the limited number of cases, precautionary measures were introduced in several countries. Airports in Thailand, Nepal, and Taiwan began screening travelers for symptoms as a preventive step, reflecting the region’s sensitivity to emerging infectious diseases after COVID-19.
What Is the Nipah Virus?
Nipah is a zoonotic virus, meaning it spreads from animals to humans. Fruit bats are considered the natural reservoir, and transmission can occur directly from bats, via infected animals such as pigs, or through contaminated food sources.
One well-documented pathway in India and Bangladesh involves raw date palm sap. The sap is collected during winter months, and fruit bats may contaminate it while feeding.
There is currently no approved vaccine or specific antiviral treatment for Nipah virus infection.

Symptoms and Disease Progression
The incubation period typically ranges from 4 days to 2 weeks. Early symptoms often resemble common viral illnesses, including:
-
Fever
-
Headache
-
Muscle pain
-
Vomiting
-
Sore throat
In severe cases, the infection can progress to respiratory illness or encephalitis—an inflammation of the brain that can be fatal. Some patients experience drowsiness, confusion, or altered consciousness as the disease advances.
The Fatality Rate—And Why It Needs Context
One of the most alarming aspects of Nipah is its fatality rate, which varies depending on how the virus is transmitted.
Dr. Emily Gurley, Professor of Epidemiology at Johns Hopkins University and a member of the World Health Organization’s Nipah Virus Taskforce, explained that:
-
Bat-to-human infections can have fatality rates as high as 90%
-
Human-to-human transmission typically results in fatality rates around 40–50%
While these numbers are undeniably high, experts stress that fatality rate alone does not determine pandemic risk.

Could Nipah Cause a Global Pandemic?
According to Dr. Gurley, the answer—based on everything observed so far—is unlikely.
“If this is like past Nipah outbreaks, then no—the virus just isn’t very transmissible,” she explained.
On average, one infected person passes the virus to only 0.3 other people, far below the threshold needed for sustained global spread. In epidemiological terms, outbreaks tend to burn out rather than expand.
That said, she noted that occasional clusters can occur when one person infects several others, but these spikes have historically been short-lived.
“Typically, it returns to the average, and the outbreak ends. That’s what we’ve always seen,” she said.
Why Health Authorities Are Still Paying Close Attention
The World Health Organization lists Nipah among its top ten priority diseases due to its severity and lack of treatment options. Monitoring is essential not because a pandemic is expected, but because any changes in transmissibility would require rapid response.
Dr. Gurley emphasized that current observations are not outside the norm, but continued vigilance is necessary.
“It’s something we should pay close attention to,” she said, “unless there’s something very different about this virus that makes it more transmissible.”

What the Public Should Know
Health authorities in affected regions advise simple, preventive measures:
-
Avoid direct contact with bats or sick animals
-
Do not consume raw or fallen fruit, especially with bite marks
-
Ensure drinking water and food sources are covered
-
Seek medical attention for unexplained fever or neurological symptoms
At present, there are no confirmed human cases outside India, and officials stress that the overall risk to the general public remains low.
The Bottom Line
Nipah virus is serious, rare, and deadly—but it is not behaving like a pandemic virus.
Experts agree that while caution and monitoring are necessary, the virus lacks the efficient human-to-human transmission needed to spread globally. In other words, awareness is warranted—panic is not.
As with many emerging diseases, understanding the science matters more than reacting to the headlines.