As north Bengal grapples with encephalitis and its deadlier variant Japanese encephalitis, residents of Kolkata have little to fear about the infection, according to a senior doctor at the Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine.
Virology department-in-charge at the facility Dr Nemai Bhattacharya told PTI, "Kolkata has little chances of being infected by the encephalitis virus. It is mostly a rural disease."
Bhattacharya said the rate of its incidence in rural areas was higher because of the environmental factors there.
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These vectors generally feed on cattle, though human and pig feeding are also recorded in some areas, he said.
"Commonly they breed in water with luxuriant vegetation mainly in paddy fields and the abundance is related to rice cultivation, shallow ditches and pools," he explained.
In the cities Culex vishnui subgroup mosquitoes will hardly get places like these. The number of water bodies in cities are far less and even chances of migratory birds (which disperse ticks infected with the virus) visiting these places are quite bleak, he said.
"But encephalitis has a chance to make an impact on the outskirts of the city and places like Howrah and Hooghly where there are ample places for the vectors to survive," the doctor said.