Lassa fever is an acute haemorrhagic viral infection that is commonly transmitted through the urine and faeces of mastomys house rats (though it can also be transmitted from person-to-person and from testing samples in labs).
It is caused by the Lassa virus which is a member of the arenavirus family. The condition first came to light in 1969 and has been named after the town in Nigeria where it began. Today, Lassa fever is mostly endemic in African countries like Benin, Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Mali, Sierra Leone, Togo and Nigeria.
Eight out of 10 people who develop this illness show no symptoms. Of those who develop serious illness and need to be hospitalised, roughly 15% die from it.
Every year, there are one lakh to three lakh cases of Lassa virus, approximately 5,000 of which prove fatal. The fever lasts anywhere between one to four weeks. Proper treatment is necessary to avoid complications.