Two decades of one health surveillance of Nipah virus in Thailand.
Supaporn WacharapluesadeeSiriporn GhaiPrateep DuengkaePattarapol Manee-OrnWeerapong ThanapongtharmAbhinbhen W SarayaSangchai YingsakmongkonYutthana JoyjindaSanipa SuradhatWeenassarin AmpootBundit NuansrichayThongchai KaewpomRachod TantilertcharoenApaporn RodpanKachen WongsathapornchaiTeerada PonpinitRome BuathongSaowalak BunprakobSudarat DamrongwatanapokinChanida RuchiseesarodSininat PetcharatWantanee KalpravidhKevin J OlivalMartha M StokesThiravat HemachudhaPublished in: One health outlook (2021)
High identity shared between the NiV genome from Thai bats and the Bangladeshi patient highlights the outbreak potential of NiV in Thailand. Results from NiV cross-sectoral surveillance were conveyed to national authorities and villagers which led to preventive control measures, increased surveillance of pigs and humans in vicinity of known NiV-infected roosts, and increased vigilance and reduced risk behaviors at the community level. This proactive One Health approach to NiV surveillance is a success story; that increased collaboration between the human, animal, and wildlife sectors is imperative to staying ahead of a zoonotic disease outbreak.