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Global H5N1 Outbreak Intensifies: 1738 Avian Flu Cases Across 41 Countries Spark Pandemic Concerns in 2025

Global H5N1 Outbreak Intensifies: 1738 Avian Flu Cases Across 41 Countries Spark Pandemic Concerns in 2025

Published 3 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Welcome to H5N1 Global Scan: Avian Flu Worldwide. Im Dan from Quiet Please, bringing you the latest on this spreading threat. As of late November 2025, highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 continues its panzootic march, ravaging birds, mammals, and sparking human worries across continents.

Starting with a continental breakdown. In North America, the US leads with 689 outbreaks since October, hitting poultry, wild birds like mallards and pelicans, and mammals including dairy cows, polar bears, and skunks, per FAO updates. Canada reports 53 events in chickens, turkeys, and wild species. Human cases total 71 since 2024, mostly mild from dairy or poultry exposure, with one H5N5 death, according to CDC and WHO. Mexico saw one H5N2 case.

Europe faces intense pressure: Germany logs 1176 outbreaks in poultry and wild birds like greylag geese; France 155; UK 308; Netherlands 136. Belgium, Denmark, and others report hundreds in poultry and waterfowl, FAO data shows. No widespread human transmission, but ECDC notes regional vigilance.

Asia sees outbreaks in China, Japan with 43 in chickens, South Korea, Philippines ducks, and Mongolia swans. Human cases include Cambodias three H5N1 with one death, Chinas 14 H9N2, per ECDC September-November overview.

Africa has Nigeria with 15 poultry events and South Africa 13 in wild birds and poultry. Oceania reports Australias elephant seal case. Scattered hits in South America via wild birds.

Major research highlights global spillovers. US studies via PMC detail 70 human H5N1 cases through May 2025, mostly occupational, no human-to-human spread, but clade 2.3.4.4b persists in cows and birds across 17 states.

WHO urges enhanced surveillance after the US H5N5 case, the 71st since 2024, calling it a first globally. FAO tracks 1738 outbreaks in 41 countries since October, stressing wild bird migration as drivers. Coordination ramps up via WHO-FAO-WOAH joint efforts for data sharing and biosecurity.

Cross-border issues loom large: Wild bird flyways fuel spread, disrupting trade. US poultry exports halted in spots; EU culls millions of birds, impacting global supply chains.

Vaccine status: Poultry vaccines deployed in Europe and Asia; human trials advance, but no approved broad-spectrum shot yet. CDC monitors for mutations.

National approaches vary: US emphasizes dairy surveillance and culling; EU mandates indoor housing and mass vaccination; Asia mixes biosecurity with rapid depopulation; Australia focuses on mammal monitoring.

This H5N1 wave demands unified action to avert pandemic risk.

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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