Bird Flu Update: US H5N1 News Now
Bird Flu Update: US H5N1 News Now [Upbeat news intro music fades out] Welcome to Bird Flu Update: US H5N1 News Now, your three-minute briefing on the latest developments. I'm your host. Outbreaks persist across the US as H5N1 enters its fourth year. The CDC reports 71 confirmed human cases since 2024, with 41 linked to dairy herds, 24 to poultry farms and culling, three to other animal exposures, and three with unknown sources. Two fatalities occurred: one in Louisiana from backyard bird exposure and one in Washington. Most cases remain mild, like conjunctivitis, but severe pneumonia and organ failure risks persist, per CDC data up to February 2026. In animals, USDA surveillance detects H5N1 in wild birds nationwide, sporadic poultry outbreaks, and mammals from California to Connecticut, including red foxes, skunks, house mice, and alpacas. Dairy cows in states like California, Texas, and Ohio show infections, with up to 10% mortality in some herds. Recent wildlife die-offs include 70 black vultures in Ohio and 400 snow geese in Pennsylvania in December 2025. Commercial flocks lost 9.65 million birds recently, concentrated in Pennsylvania's Lancaster County. From the past week: USDA's March 20, 2025, update highlights progress on its five-pronged strategy. They've assessed biosecurity at over 130 poultry facilities, with 38 last week, offering free audits and covering 75% of high-risk upgrades. Indemnity for culled layer hens rose to $16.94 per bird on February 27. New grants fund therapeutics, vaccines, and risk research, with a webinar April 1. CDC surveillance shows no unusual human activity, monitoring 31,900 exposed people and testing 1,300 since September 2025. No new guidance changes, but mandatory milk tank testing continues for interstate cattle movement. Research notes: The B3.13 bovine strain highly affects camelids via contamination, and high viral loads in cow mammary glands killed cats drinking raw milk, says FDA. For listeners: Risk to the public stays low without sustained human transmission. Avoid raw milk, unpasteurized dairy, and contact with sick birds or mammals. Farmworkers: Use PPE. Pasteurized milk and cooked poultry are safe. Compared to prior weeks: Human cases steady at 71 through February, versus surging poultry losses—over 9 million birds recently versus 1.4 million in late 2025. USDA's aggressive biosecurity marks improvement over 2025's slower responses. Thanks for tuning in. Join us next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production. For me, check out Quiet Please Dot A I. [Outro music swells] (Word count: 498. Character count: 2897) For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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