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Global H5N1 Avian Flu Surge: 19 Countries Affected, 5,063 Outbreaks, Experts Warn of Potential Pandemic Risks

Global H5N1 Avian Flu Surge: 19 Countries Affected, 5,063 Outbreaks, Experts Warn of Potential Pandemic Risks

Published 3 months, 4 weeks ago
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H5N1 Global Scan: Avian Flu Worldwide

HOST: Welcome to H5N1 Global Scan: Avian Flu Worldwide, your three-minute international focus on the escalating avian flu crisis. Im zooming in on outbreaks, research, and global responses as of late 2025.

Start with a continental breakdown. In the Americas, PAHO reports 5,063 outbreaks across 19 countries since 2022 through week 41 of 2025, with 76 human H5 cases including two deaths in five nations. The US leads with 70 human infections from March 2024 to May 2025, mostly mild among dairy and poultry workers, per CDC and PMC studies, plus a novel H5N5 fatality in November 2025 per WHO. Europe faces intense pressure: ECDC notes 19 human cases from September to November 2025 in four countries, two deaths. FAO logs over 1,700 outbreaks since October in 41 countries, hitting poultry hard in France, Germany, UK, and wild birds everywhere. Asia sees cases in China, Cambodia, Japan, Korea, with FAO reporting poultry and wild bird hits. Africa has outbreaks in Nigeria, South Africa; Oceania in Australia with elephant seal cases.

Major research initiatives reveal clade 2.3.4.4b driving the panzootic, spilling into mammals like US dairy cows and polar bears, per NETEC and FAO. US studies show no human-to-human transmission despite 71 cases since 2024.

WHO warns of ongoing public health threats, reporting 990 human H5N1 cases globally since 2003 with 48% fatality, urging vigilance. FAO tracks zoonotic potential in real-time updates.

Global coordination ramps up via WOAH and FAO-WHO networks sharing surveillance data across borders.

Cross-border issues loom large: wild bird migration fuels spread, disrupting poultry trade. US outbreaks in multiple species trigger export curbs, echoing Europes culls.

Vaccine development advances unevenly. US stockpiles candidate vaccines; global efforts focus on poultry shots, but human trials lag amid low transmission risk.

National approaches vary: US emphasizes dairy surveillance and targeted human monitoring with mild outcomes. Europe mandates mass culls and biosecurity, per ECDC. Asia mixes vaccination in poultry with wild bird tracking. Developing nations struggle with detection gaps.

This multi-species threat demands unified action to avert pandemic risks.

Thanks for tuning in. Come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production. For me, check out Quiet Please Dot A I.

For more http://www.quietplease.ai

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