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H5N1 Avian Flu Spreads Across Continents: Global Outbreak Updates and Response Strategies
Published 1 month, 1 week ago
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H5N1 Global Scan: Avian Flu Worldwide
This is H5N1 Global Scan: Avian Flu Worldwide. I’m your host, and for the next three minutes we’re taking a fast, factual tour of how avian flu is reshaping our world.
Since 2020, a highly pathogenic strain of H5N1 has swept across birds on every continent except Australia, with the World Organisation for Animal Health and the UN Food and Agriculture Organization reporting thousands of outbreaks and tens of millions of birds culled to protect flocks and trade. In its latest situation update, FAO notes more than a thousand new outbreaks across 39 countries in just a few months, driven largely by the now-dominant clade 2.3.4.4b.
Let’s break it down by continent.
In Asia, countries like China, Vietnam, Japan, and the Republic of Korea continue to report recurring poultry and wild bird outbreaks. WHO and national health authorities there are closely tracking sporadic human infections, including recent cases in Cambodia, but emphasize that sustained human-to-human transmission has not been detected.
In Europe, surveillance data compiled by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control and national veterinary agencies show dense clusters of H5N1 in wild birds and commercial poultry from the Netherlands and Germany to France, Poland, and the Nordic countries. Strict culling, indoor housing orders for poultry, and large-scale surveillance of wild birds are now seasonal routines.
Across Africa, FAO and WOAH report ongoing outbreaks in countries such as Nigeria and South Africa, often straining veterinary services and threatening food security where poultry is a key protein source.
In the Americas, the Pan American Health Organization and national agencies in the United States, Canada, and several Latin American countries have documented thousands of animal outbreaks since 2022, with major losses in commercial turkey and egg operations and detections in marine mammals and other wildlife.
Oceania has largely remained free of sustained H5N1 circulation, but Australia and New Zealand maintain high alert with intensive border biosecurity, import controls, and wild bird monitoring.
Global coordination is intense. WHO, FAO, WOAH, and the UN Environment Programme operate a joint platform called the One Health Quadripartite, stressing that animal, human, and environmental health must be managed together. WHO’s latest risk assessment rates the current public health risk from H5N1 to the general population as low, but higher for people with direct exposure to infected birds or contaminated environments.
International trade is feeling the impact. Temporary bans on poultry and egg imports from affected countries, along with mass culling, have driven price spikes and supply disruptions, according to FAO market analyses. Export-heavy producers in Europe and the Americas face repeated trade restrictions every time new outbreaks are reported.
On the research front, major initiatives by WHO’s Global Influenza Surveillance and Response System, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the European Reference Laboratory for Avian Influenza, and academic groups worldwide are sequencing viruses, mapping their spread in migratory birds, and testing their ability to infect mammals. Recent studies highlighted by the University of Nebraska’s Transmission project warn that expanding infections in mammals raise concern about further adaptation to humans.
Vaccine development is advancing but uneven. Several countries, including China, Egypt, and parts of Europe, use poultry vaccines targeting the circulating H5 strains, while others, such as the United States and the United Kingdom, still rely mainly on stamping-out strategies and strict biosecurity to protect export markets. For humans, WHO’s collaborating centers and companies hold candidate H5N1 vaccines and prototype mRNA form
This is H5N1 Global Scan: Avian Flu Worldwide. I’m your host, and for the next three minutes we’re taking a fast, factual tour of how avian flu is reshaping our world.
Since 2020, a highly pathogenic strain of H5N1 has swept across birds on every continent except Australia, with the World Organisation for Animal Health and the UN Food and Agriculture Organization reporting thousands of outbreaks and tens of millions of birds culled to protect flocks and trade. In its latest situation update, FAO notes more than a thousand new outbreaks across 39 countries in just a few months, driven largely by the now-dominant clade 2.3.4.4b.
Let’s break it down by continent.
In Asia, countries like China, Vietnam, Japan, and the Republic of Korea continue to report recurring poultry and wild bird outbreaks. WHO and national health authorities there are closely tracking sporadic human infections, including recent cases in Cambodia, but emphasize that sustained human-to-human transmission has not been detected.
In Europe, surveillance data compiled by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control and national veterinary agencies show dense clusters of H5N1 in wild birds and commercial poultry from the Netherlands and Germany to France, Poland, and the Nordic countries. Strict culling, indoor housing orders for poultry, and large-scale surveillance of wild birds are now seasonal routines.
Across Africa, FAO and WOAH report ongoing outbreaks in countries such as Nigeria and South Africa, often straining veterinary services and threatening food security where poultry is a key protein source.
In the Americas, the Pan American Health Organization and national agencies in the United States, Canada, and several Latin American countries have documented thousands of animal outbreaks since 2022, with major losses in commercial turkey and egg operations and detections in marine mammals and other wildlife.
Oceania has largely remained free of sustained H5N1 circulation, but Australia and New Zealand maintain high alert with intensive border biosecurity, import controls, and wild bird monitoring.
Global coordination is intense. WHO, FAO, WOAH, and the UN Environment Programme operate a joint platform called the One Health Quadripartite, stressing that animal, human, and environmental health must be managed together. WHO’s latest risk assessment rates the current public health risk from H5N1 to the general population as low, but higher for people with direct exposure to infected birds or contaminated environments.
International trade is feeling the impact. Temporary bans on poultry and egg imports from affected countries, along with mass culling, have driven price spikes and supply disruptions, according to FAO market analyses. Export-heavy producers in Europe and the Americas face repeated trade restrictions every time new outbreaks are reported.
On the research front, major initiatives by WHO’s Global Influenza Surveillance and Response System, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the European Reference Laboratory for Avian Influenza, and academic groups worldwide are sequencing viruses, mapping their spread in migratory birds, and testing their ability to infect mammals. Recent studies highlighted by the University of Nebraska’s Transmission project warn that expanding infections in mammals raise concern about further adaptation to humans.
Vaccine development is advancing but uneven. Several countries, including China, Egypt, and parts of Europe, use poultry vaccines targeting the circulating H5 strains, while others, such as the United States and the United Kingdom, still rely mainly on stamping-out strategies and strict biosecurity to protect export markets. For humans, WHO’s collaborating centers and companies hold candidate H5N1 vaccines and prototype mRNA form