Leptospirosis Is the Monsoon Waterborne Infection Most Urban Indians Have Never Heard Of
Aishwarya Kapoor | Times Life Bureau | Jul 15, 2026, 07:00 IST
Leptospirosis Is the Monsoon Waterborne Infection Most Urban Indians Have Never Heard Of
Image credit : Times Life Bureau
Every monsoon, leptospirosis hospitalises thousands across India, yet most urban residents cannot name it, let alone recognise its symptoms. This bacterial infection spreads through floodwater contaminated by rats, mimics common fever, and kills when missed. Here is what the disease actually does, why Indian cities are ideal for it, and how prevention works.
A Fever That Looks Like Everything Else
A 2017 study published in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases estimated India accounts for roughly 10 to 15 percent of the global leptospirosis burden, with the highest incidence reported in Kerala, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, and Andaman and Nicobar Islands during and immediately after the monsoon. The disease kills between 6 and 15 percent of those who develop its severe form, Weil's disease, which involves kidney failure, liver damage, and internal bleeding. That mortality rate is not a number from a low-resource context, it reflects what happens when diagnosis comes late, which in India it almost always does.
Why Rats and Rain Make Indian Cities Dangerous
Mumbai is the clearest example. After the 2005 floods, the city recorded a sharp spike in leptospirosis cases, and the pattern has repeated in smaller form every heavy-rain season since. But Mumbai is not unique. Chennai's low-lying neighbourhoods, Kolkata's older drainage corridors, and Pune's rapidly expanding periphery where new construction disturbs rat colonies, all create the same conditions. The urban poor who wade through waterlogged streets to reach work carry the highest risk, but the infection does not stop at income. A middle-class resident whose car stalls in a flooded underpass and who steps out to check the water level has the same exposure window.
What Happens Inside the Body When Leptospira Gets In
The window for effective antibiotic treatment, doxycycline or penicillin, is narrow. Treatment started in the first four days dramatically reduces the risk of progression. After day seven of symptoms, antibiotics still matter but the organ damage may already be underway. This is the clinical problem India faces: patients present late because the early symptoms read as ordinary monsoon fever, and leptospirosis sits low on the differential diagnosis in most urban clinics that are simultaneously managing dengue, typhoid, and influenza.
Prevention Is Mostly Behavioural, Not Medical
The specific steps that reduce risk:
- Avoid wading through floodwater when possible. When unavoidable, wear rubber boots or closed waterproof footwear that covers the ankle.
- Cover cuts, abrasions, and skin breaks with waterproof dressings before any contact with potentially contaminated water. Leptospira enters fastest through broken skin.
- Do not rub your eyes after contact with floodwater. The conjunctiva is a direct entry point.
- Shower with soap immediately after flood exposure. The bacteria on skin surfaces can be removed mechanically before they penetrate.
- Doxycycline 200 mg once weekly is used as chemoprophylaxis in high-risk occupational groups, sewer workers, agricultural labourers, soldiers in field conditions, and can be taken under medical supervision during a known outbreak period.
Rodent control matters at the civic level. Cities that have invested in structured waste management and sealed drainage are measurably less exposed. The individual cannot fix the city's rat population, but the correlation between poor municipal sanitation and leptospirosis incidence is direct and well-documented.
The Diagnostic Gap India Has Not Closed
The true burden of leptospirosis in India is almost certainly higher than official figures show. The disease is notifiable under the Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme, but underreporting is structural: patients who recover in the first phase are rarely tested, patients who die in rural settings may be recorded under undifferentiated fever, and the diagnostic infrastructure to confirm cases simply does not exist at the scale the disease operates.
The monsoon brings dengue warnings, malaria advisories, and cholera alerts to every news cycle. Leptospirosis, which shares the same season and the same floodwater, gets a fraction of that attention despite its higher case fatality rate in severe presentations. The bacteria have been circulating in Indian cities for as long as rats and monsoon rains have coexisted, which is to say, indefinitely. The gap is not in the disease's visibility. It is in the public health communication that decides which monsoon threats get named.