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H5N1 Avian Flu Spreads Globally in 2026: Massive Outbreaks in Birds, Mammals, and Sporadic Human Cases Worldwide
Published 3 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Welcome to H5N1 Global Scan: Avian Flu Worldwide. I'm your host, bringing you the latest on this escalating threat as we kick off 2026.
H5N1 avian flu is rampant globally, infecting birds, mammals, and sporadically humans across every continent. Since 2003, WHO reports 986 to 991 human cases worldwide with a 48% fatality rate, mostly from bird contact. In 2025 alone, Cambodia saw 11 cases and six deaths, per WHO's Disease Outbreak News.
By continent: Asia leads with outbreaks in China, Japan, South Korea, Cambodia, Bangladesh, Mongolia, Philippines, and more, hitting poultry, wild birds, and cats, according to FAO's global update. Europe faces massive waves—Germany reports over 1,100 events, France 155, UK 308, Belgium 76—striking poultry, swans, geese, and raptors. North America is hit hard: US tallied 415 recent outbreaks in wild birds, cattle, and mammals like skunks and polar bears; Canada 53 in poultry and eagles; PAHO notes 5,136 animal outbreaks across 19 Americas countries since 2022, with 75 human cases and two deaths. Africa sees cases in Nigeria and South Africa; Oceania in Australia with elephant seals.
Major research: Clade 2.3.4.4b drives spread across Africa, Asia, Europe, and Americas, causing massive wildlife die-offs and mammal jumps, per PAHO and Science Focus. US lost over 180 million poultry, 1,000 dairy farms affected, costing $1.19 billion, with 71 human cases and two deaths, CDC data shows. Scientists warn it's "out of control," entrenched in wildlife and mutating unpredictably.
WHO urges vigilance, noting no sustained human transmission but high CFR. FAO tracks 1,738 outbreaks in 41 countries since October 2025. Global coordination ramps up via WOAH and IHR focal points for surveillance sharing.
Cross-border issues: Wild bird migration fuels spread, disrupting trade—egg prices soar in US, poultry exports halted. No major human-to-human jumps yet.
Vaccine status: No universal human vaccine; efforts focus on poultry and high-risk workers. CDC monitors without unusual activity signals.
National approaches vary: US emphasizes dairy/poultry culls and reimbursements; Europe mandates biosecurity and wild bird monitoring; Asia boosts surveillance in live markets; Cambodia traces bird contacts aggressively.
Stay vigilant—vigilance over panic, as experts say.
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
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
H5N1 avian flu is rampant globally, infecting birds, mammals, and sporadically humans across every continent. Since 2003, WHO reports 986 to 991 human cases worldwide with a 48% fatality rate, mostly from bird contact. In 2025 alone, Cambodia saw 11 cases and six deaths, per WHO's Disease Outbreak News.
By continent: Asia leads with outbreaks in China, Japan, South Korea, Cambodia, Bangladesh, Mongolia, Philippines, and more, hitting poultry, wild birds, and cats, according to FAO's global update. Europe faces massive waves—Germany reports over 1,100 events, France 155, UK 308, Belgium 76—striking poultry, swans, geese, and raptors. North America is hit hard: US tallied 415 recent outbreaks in wild birds, cattle, and mammals like skunks and polar bears; Canada 53 in poultry and eagles; PAHO notes 5,136 animal outbreaks across 19 Americas countries since 2022, with 75 human cases and two deaths. Africa sees cases in Nigeria and South Africa; Oceania in Australia with elephant seals.
Major research: Clade 2.3.4.4b drives spread across Africa, Asia, Europe, and Americas, causing massive wildlife die-offs and mammal jumps, per PAHO and Science Focus. US lost over 180 million poultry, 1,000 dairy farms affected, costing $1.19 billion, with 71 human cases and two deaths, CDC data shows. Scientists warn it's "out of control," entrenched in wildlife and mutating unpredictably.
WHO urges vigilance, noting no sustained human transmission but high CFR. FAO tracks 1,738 outbreaks in 41 countries since October 2025. Global coordination ramps up via WOAH and IHR focal points for surveillance sharing.
Cross-border issues: Wild bird migration fuels spread, disrupting trade—egg prices soar in US, poultry exports halted. No major human-to-human jumps yet.
Vaccine status: No universal human vaccine; efforts focus on poultry and high-risk workers. CDC monitors without unusual activity signals.
National approaches vary: US emphasizes dairy/poultry culls and reimbursements; Europe mandates biosecurity and wild bird monitoring; Asia boosts surveillance in live markets; Cambodia traces bird contacts aggressively.
Stay vigilant—vigilance over panic, as experts say.
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
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI