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H5N1 Global Crisis: Avian Flu Surges Worldwide with 1300 Outbreaks and Potential Human Transmission Risk

H5N1 Global Crisis: Avian Flu Surges Worldwide with 1300 Outbreaks and Potential Human Transmission Risk

Published 2 months, 1 week ago
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H5N1 Global Scan: Avian Flu Worldwide

[Host upbeat intro music fades in]

Welcome to H5N1 Global Scan: Avian Flu Worldwide, your three-minute international focus on the avian flu crisis. Im Ian, and today we dive into the latest as of early 2026.

Starting with a continental breakdown. In Europe, FAO reports over 1,300 outbreaks since late 2025 in countries like Germany with 2,400 events in poultry and wild birds, France at 297, and the UK at 548, hitting chickens, ducks, and wild species like mute swans. Asia sees heavy action too: Japan with 83 outbreaks, South Korea 53, China 18, all in poultry and wild birds. North America leads in scale, with the US reporting 1,409 H5N1 events and 1,423 H5Nx in poultry, backyard flocks, and mammals like foxes, per FAO and USDA APHIS. South America has Brazil and Colombia with smaller clusters in wild birds. Africa notes Nigeria and South Africa outbreaks in poultry.

Human cases remain low but concerning. WHO tracks 890 sporadic infections since 2003 across 23 countries, with 26 globally in early 2025 per CDC. The US has 71 cases since 2024, mostly from dairy cattle and poultry, including Louisianas first death.

Major research highlights global spread via wild birds. Beacon Bio notes 777 new HPAI outbreaks in December 2025 alone. WHOs Global Influenza Programme urges monthly reporting under International Health Regulations. FAO warns of zoonotic potential in their latest update, calling for enhanced surveillance.

WHO states cases are sporadic with no sustained human transmission, publishing cumulative data to January 22, 2026. FAO emphasizes coordination to curb animal outbreaks in 39 countries.

Global efforts shine through One Health approaches, with WHO and FAO pushing cross-agency surveillance. Cross-border issues loom large: migratory birds fuel spread, disrupting poultry trade. The US sees massive culling, impacting exports.

Vaccine development advances unevenly. Global initiatives target poultry vaccines, but human vaccines lag, with CDC monitoring for mammal adaptation.

National approaches vary: Europe enforces strict biosecurity and culls, like Germanys mass poultry measures. The US focuses on dairy monitoring and farm protections. Asia mixes vaccination in China and Korea with culls in Japan. The US contrasts with Europes precautionary wild bird tracking.

As scientists warn via University of Nebraska its out of control, urgency grows for unified action.

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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