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▼ More than 150 children have died in an outbreak of acute encephalitis, which has gripped the Indian state of Bihar since the beginning of June. BBC Hindi's Priyanka Dubey reports from Muzaffarpur, the epicentre of the outbreak.
The night before three-year-old Rohit Sahani died, he had gone to eat at a community feast in his village.
"He got dressed and went to eat with other children. A few hours after coming back, he seemed restless," Sudha, his 27-year-old mother, said, sitting in the family's mud home in Rajapunas village.
"He kept asking for water throughout the night. He woke up hungry in the morning. But just after eating two spoons of rice, he had diarrhoea."
His parents took the boy to two local doctors, but they were on strike in solidarity with their colleagues in the eastern city of Kolkata, who had been assaulted by the relatives of a patient who had died in hospital. So Rohit was taken in an ambulance to a local government hospital.
"Rohit's fever shot up there and his convulsions intensified. Doctors moved him from one ward to another three times in the five hours that he spent there. But his condition didn't improve," his father Anil Sahani said.
"The doctors put him on oxygen and shifted him to the main government hospital in Muzaffarpur."
Rohit died in the crowded paediatric intensive care unit of the Sri Krishna Medical College Hospital within two hours.
Doctors said the toddler had died of Acute Encephalitis Syndrome (AES). More than 150 children have now died in an outbreak of the disease, which is also known as "brain fever".
At least 500 patients, many of whom are below the age of 10, have been admitted for treatment at two hospitals in the district since the beginning of June.
The disease usually occurs during the monsoon season and symptoms include high fever, (▪ ▪ ▪)
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