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India's state of Kerala fighting rise in cases of rare 'brain-eating' disease

Kerala's 2025 surge in brain-eating amoeba cases includes 69 infections and 19 deaths, with a 24% survival rate due to early detection and treatment efforts, health minister said.

  • Amoebic meningoencephalitis, caused by the Naegleria fowleri amoeba, has become a public health concern in Kerala, with 69 cases and 19 deaths reported in 2025.
  • The Kerala government is chlorinating water sources to prevent amoeba infections, as symptoms can progress rapidly.
  • Authorities have begun chlorinating wells and testing statewide to detect and treat infections.
  • Health Minister Veena George stated that this year's cases are single, isolated instances, complicating epidemiological investigations.
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Lean Left

The authorities of the Indian state of Kerala, from the south of the country, issued a health warning after they recorded an increase in the number of deaths and infections caused by an ambiguity of “Creation Eaters”, which doubled...

·Romania
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Right

In the southern Indian state of Kerala, the authorities raise the alarm about increasing deaths from an amoeba that destroys the brain. According to this, 72 infections have been registered with the amoeba Naegleria fowleri since the beginning of the year and 19 deaths. Although the number of cases is still very low, the number of deaths has doubled compared to last year, the authorities explained on Thursday. In 2024, 36 infections and nine dea…

·Vienna, Austria
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Lean Right

Authorities in South India are concerned: the number of people who die from an amoeba that destroys the brain is increasing significantly. Overall, an infection is still rare - but the deaths have already doubled compared to the previous year. The country appoints a task force.

Lean Left

The amoeba Naegleria fowleri can cause inflammations in the human brain, which are mostly fatal, but the number of cases in India is low, but has doubled.

·Germany
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The CSR Journal broke the news in on Monday, September 15, 2025.
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