What caused the black fungus outbreak in India?

Jai Talwar
The Ends of Globalization
2 min readNov 19, 2021

Mucormycosis, which got coined the term ‘black fungus’ in India is a fungus that infects the nose and eyes and if severe can attack the brain. This fungus can be extremely deadly to immunocompromised people such as those suffering from Cancer and HIV. This fungus attacked people being treated for severe covid in India and these people would also fall into the above category. With a 50% mortality rate and with many of the survivors having to get body parts such as an eye removed, this disease further devastated India during its second wave of Covid.

One of the main hypothesised reasons for this outbreak specifically in India is due to the high rate of diabetes in India and the over prescription of steroids. With approximately every eighth adult over 30 in India suffering from Diabetes, many of those suffering from covid were highly at risk. Therefore, it became a common practice in India during the second wave to inject high amounts of steroids into those suffering from severe symptoms or those infected who do not yet have such symptoms but suffer from underlying health conditions such as diabetes. These steroids were used to dampen the inflammation of the lungs for covid patients suffering from such symptoms or underlying health conditions.

However, although these steroids help the body combat inflammation of the lungs, they also significantly reduced the immunity of the patients. If the average person came into contact with black fungus, it would not result in any infection or medical issue in most cases. However, with people suffering from reduced immunity due to covid, and then having this reduction further amplified due to the steroids, the level of immunity in such patients was not at the normal level (Maryn Mckenna, scientificamerican.com)

Therefore, with the exposure of these patients to bacteria and fungi in the hospital, infections, especially those of black fungus were amplified significantly. Furthermore, as claimed by doctor Nishant Kumar of Hinduja Hospital in Mumbai “There is a lot of contamination in oxygen cylinders and pipes that are being used to treat patients”. He further goes on to say that the longer you are exposed to such pipes, the higher the chance of being exposed to such infections. Therefore it is safe for one to say that the use of steroids, underlying health issues as well as unsanitary oxygen cylinders could all have played a part in India’s devastating spread of Mucromycosis, a disease that is not transferable between humans or animals.

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