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Global H5N1 Avian Flu Surge: Unprecedented Spread Across Continents Raises Alarm for Humans and Animals in 2025

Global H5N1 Avian Flu Surge: Unprecedented Spread Across Continents Raises Alarm for Humans and Animals in 2025

Published 3 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
H5N1 Global Scan: Avian Flu Worldwide

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Host: Welcome to H5N1 Global Scan: Avian Flu Worldwide, your three-minute international focus on the avian flu crisis reshaping our world. Im zooming in on outbreaks, research, and global responses as 2025 closes with unprecedented spread.

Start with a continental breakdown. In Europe, FAO reports over 1700 outbreaks since October across 41 countries, with Germany logging 1176 events in poultry and wild birds like mallards and mute swans. ECDC notes a surge: 1444 infected wild birds in 26 countries from September to November, quadrupling last year, plus 699 poultry outbreaks in 23 nations per UNMC and EC data. North America faces heavy hits; US CDC tallies 689 US outbreaks since October in species from black ducks to polar bears, with 71 human cases since 2024 mostly from dairy cows and poultry. Canada reports 53 events. Asia sees China with greylag goose cases, Japan 43 in chickens, and human infections: WHO logs 14 A(H9N2) in China, three A(H5N1) in Cambodia with one death. Africa has South Africa poultry outbreaks and Nigeria 15 in chickens. Oceania notes one Australian elephant seal case.

Major research highlights unprecedented wild bird circulation driving primary poultry infections via environmental contamination, per ECDC. Science Alert warns the world is sleeping on bird flu as cases rise.

WHO states human H5N1 infections total nearly 1000 since 2003 with 50% fatality, plus recent A(H5N5) US death and 19 cases September-November across four countries. FAO tracks global AIV with zoonotic potential, urging vigilance. Coordination ramps up via WHO-FAO-WOAH collaboration on surveillance and risk assessments.

Cross-border issues loom large: migratory birds like whooper swans spread H5N1 from Europe to Asia. Trade impacts poultry exports; EU culls hit farms, disrupting markets.

Vaccine development: US advances poultry and cattle shots amid dairy outbreaks; global efforts focus clade 2.3.4.4b strains in wild mammals.

National approaches vary: Europe emphasizes biosecurity and wild bird monitoring with mass culls. US prioritizes dairy surveillance and worker protection, logging 223000 tests. Asia mixes vaccination in poultry with strict quarantines.

As H5N1 evolves, unified global action is key to containment.

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.

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