A first serious case of avian flu detected in humans in the United States, according to American authorities

Sixty-one cases of avian flu have been recorded in humans across the Atlantic, but this is the first serious case.

Published on 18/12/2024 18:03

Updated on 18/12/2024 19:30

Reading time: 2min

Cow's milk samples analyzed after several cases of avian flu transmitted to mammals, photographed on December 10, 2024 in a laboratory in New York. (MICHAEL M. SANTIAGO / GETTY IMAGES / AFP)
Cow’s milk samples analyzed after several cases of avian flu transmitted to mammals, photographed on December 10, 2024 in a laboratory in New York. (MICHAEL M. SANTIAGO / GETTY IMAGES / AFP)

A patient was hospitalized in Louisiana due to infection with the avian flu virus, the first serious case in the United States, American health authorities announced Wednesday, December 18. The patient was in contact with sick and dead birds in a barnyard, specify the American Centers for Disease Prevention and Control (CDC), adding that, since April, 61 cases of avian flu in humans have been reported. been detected in the United States. No further details on the patient’s profile or state of health were given.

Genetic sequencing showed that the H5N1 virus which infected this patient from the state of Louisiana, in the south of the country, was of the same type as that which had earlier infected people in the American state of Washington and in neighboring Canada. This version of the virus is different from that detected in several herds of dairy cows and on poultry farms in the United States.

Other serious cases of avian flu in humans have previously been detected in other countries, recall the American authorities. This was the case of a teenager hospitalized in November in the Canadian province of British Columbia. “No spread of bird flu [de sous-type] H5 from person to person was not detected”specify the authorities, adding that this new case detected, although serious, “do not modify” their assessment “concerning the immediate risk linked to the H5N1 avian influenza virus for public health, which remains low”. Avian influenza A (H5N1) first appeared in 1996, but since 2020 the number of outbreaks in birds has exploded and an increasing number of mammal species have been affected.

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