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H5N1 Avian Flu Spreads Globally: Unprecedented Outbreak Impacts Agriculture, Wildlife, and Human Health in 2025
Published 7 months ago
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This is H5N1 Global Scan: Avian Flu Worldwide
Today, we take a three-minute look at the global impact of avian influenza, specifically H5N1, as the virus continues to shape public health, agriculture, and economies across continents.
Since 2020, H5N1 outbreaks have swept every continent except Australia, resulting in historic levels of poultry and wild bird deaths, alongside an unprecedented spread to mammal populations. According to the Pan American Health Organization, between 2022 and early 2025, there were over 4,700 animal outbreaks in 19 countries in the Americas, with notable events in the United States, Canada, Peru, Argentina, and beyond. While animal cases remain most numerous, human infections—though rare—continue to be detected. The World Health Organization reports that since 2003, nearly a thousand human H5N1 cases have occurred globally, with nearly half proving fatal.
Breaking it down by continent: In North and South America, the spread has been marked by multiple clusters in both wild and domestic animals, and more recently, dairy cattle outbreaks in the United States have drawn attention for their rapid expansion, now impacting nearly a thousand dairy herds across 17 states. Europe has faced repeated outbreaks in both domestic birds and wild waterfowl, as the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control highlights ongoing risks for farm and market workers, although the general public’s risk remains low.
Asia continues to see sporadic but severe human cases, especially in Cambodia, Vietnam, and China. In early 2025, Cambodia recorded a sharp spike—eleven human cases in just six months, including several fatalities, often following direct contact with sick poultry. India, Vietnam, China, and the Philippines have also reported cases in both humans and animals, sometimes involving new strains through virus reassortment.
Major international research initiatives are focused on monitoring viral evolution and zoonotic potential. The United States and European labs have sequenced emergent H5N1 genotypes in cattle, while in Southeast Asia, the Food and Agriculture Organization reports new hybrid strains emerging as viruses swap genes across species. As experts from global organizations warn, these mutations heighten the need for vigilant cross-border surveillance and information sharing.
The World Health Organization and the Food and Agriculture Organization have issued coordinated advisories, urging countries to bolster animal and human surveillance, quickly report cases, and adhere to international guidelines for containment. Both agencies repeatedly stress the necessity for countries to work together, citing that fragmented national responses hinder global preparedness.
The ongoing outbreaks have generated economic aftershocks—trade barriers, poultry culls, and shortages have hit Europe and the Americas, with the United States culling over 20 million chickens in late 2024 leading to egg shortages, and Asian countries such as the Philippines imposing temporary export bans to contain spread.
Vaccine efforts are accelerating worldwide. While some countries, like China, have ongoing poultry vaccine programs, innovations in mRNA vaccines for poultry and high-risk human groups are now under development in Europe and North America, though commercial rollout is still pending. Public health approaches still favor culling and movement restrictions, but some nations have begun vaccinating at-risk animal populations—an approach debated internationally.
National containment strategies vary: the US and Canada lean heavily on surveillance and culling, Europe emphasizes biosecurity and gradual poultry vaccination, while Southeast Asian nations focus on grassroots campaigns and rapid farm quarantines.
That’s today’s H5N1 Global Scan. Thank you for tuning in and join us next week for more insight from around the world.
Today, we take a three-minute look at the global impact of avian influenza, specifically H5N1, as the virus continues to shape public health, agriculture, and economies across continents.
Since 2020, H5N1 outbreaks have swept every continent except Australia, resulting in historic levels of poultry and wild bird deaths, alongside an unprecedented spread to mammal populations. According to the Pan American Health Organization, between 2022 and early 2025, there were over 4,700 animal outbreaks in 19 countries in the Americas, with notable events in the United States, Canada, Peru, Argentina, and beyond. While animal cases remain most numerous, human infections—though rare—continue to be detected. The World Health Organization reports that since 2003, nearly a thousand human H5N1 cases have occurred globally, with nearly half proving fatal.
Breaking it down by continent: In North and South America, the spread has been marked by multiple clusters in both wild and domestic animals, and more recently, dairy cattle outbreaks in the United States have drawn attention for their rapid expansion, now impacting nearly a thousand dairy herds across 17 states. Europe has faced repeated outbreaks in both domestic birds and wild waterfowl, as the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control highlights ongoing risks for farm and market workers, although the general public’s risk remains low.
Asia continues to see sporadic but severe human cases, especially in Cambodia, Vietnam, and China. In early 2025, Cambodia recorded a sharp spike—eleven human cases in just six months, including several fatalities, often following direct contact with sick poultry. India, Vietnam, China, and the Philippines have also reported cases in both humans and animals, sometimes involving new strains through virus reassortment.
Major international research initiatives are focused on monitoring viral evolution and zoonotic potential. The United States and European labs have sequenced emergent H5N1 genotypes in cattle, while in Southeast Asia, the Food and Agriculture Organization reports new hybrid strains emerging as viruses swap genes across species. As experts from global organizations warn, these mutations heighten the need for vigilant cross-border surveillance and information sharing.
The World Health Organization and the Food and Agriculture Organization have issued coordinated advisories, urging countries to bolster animal and human surveillance, quickly report cases, and adhere to international guidelines for containment. Both agencies repeatedly stress the necessity for countries to work together, citing that fragmented national responses hinder global preparedness.
The ongoing outbreaks have generated economic aftershocks—trade barriers, poultry culls, and shortages have hit Europe and the Americas, with the United States culling over 20 million chickens in late 2024 leading to egg shortages, and Asian countries such as the Philippines imposing temporary export bans to contain spread.
Vaccine efforts are accelerating worldwide. While some countries, like China, have ongoing poultry vaccine programs, innovations in mRNA vaccines for poultry and high-risk human groups are now under development in Europe and North America, though commercial rollout is still pending. Public health approaches still favor culling and movement restrictions, but some nations have begun vaccinating at-risk animal populations—an approach debated internationally.
National containment strategies vary: the US and Canada lean heavily on surveillance and culling, Europe emphasizes biosecurity and gradual poultry vaccination, while Southeast Asian nations focus on grassroots campaigns and rapid farm quarantines.
That’s today’s H5N1 Global Scan. Thank you for tuning in and join us next week for more insight from around the world.