A first human death linked to avian flu has been recorded in the United States

A first human death linked to avian flu has been recorded in the United States
A first human death linked to avian flu has been recorded in the United States
Read also: The avian flu epidemic continues in the United States and warning signals worry experts

This is why he considers that the risk presented by avian flu for the general public remains “low”. As for “people who work with birds, poultry or cows, or who are exposed to these animals as part of their leisure activities”, the risk is “higher”.

A “not unexpected” death

For several months, the United States has been facing an epizootic – the equivalent of an epidemic in animals – of avian flu. The virus circulates in poultry farms and cattle herds and 66 cases of avian flu in humans have been detected since the start of 2024, the vast majority being mild and linked to known contact with infected animals. Although no cases of spread between humans have been observed, the level of circulation of the virus worries experts.

“I’m not worried about the average citizen, but about people who are in contact with animals that we know can be infected,” Jennifer Nuzzo, professor of epidemiology at the university, told AFP. Brown. And continued: “It’s a nasty virus that no one would like to catch.”

Also read: Very complicated negotiations on a pandemic treaty

“Although tragic, a death from the H5N1 virus in the United States is not unexpected,” the American Centers for Disease Prevention and Control (CDC) also recalled about the death reported in Louisiana. “Outside the United States, more than 950 cases of H5N1 avian influenza have been reported to the World Health Organization, and about half of them resulted in death,” they report in a statement.

Cases recorded in 24 countries

These cases were recorded between 2003 and the end of 2024 in 24 countries, including a large number in China and Vietnam, specifies a WHO document. “The vast majority of cases of contamination and death are linked to known exposure” to a sick animal, notes Jennifer Nuzzo.

As it stands, this specialist in epidemic monitoring fears above all that more people working on farms or in contact with wild animals “will fall ill and die”. Furthermore, she emphasizes, if the Louisiana patient presented other pathologies, the case of a Canadian teenager hospitalized in 2024 for avian flu shows that younger and healthier people can also be seriously affected.

Read more: Antoine Flahault: “Dreading an H5N1 pandemic is probably not the best strategy to adopt”

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.

Political issues

Experts fear that this strong circulation of the virus will facilitate a mutation allowing it to be transmitted from one human to another. Some also fear that it will mix with seasonal flu and thus become more transmissible. Genetic sequencing of the virus found in the Louisiana patient showed that it was different from the version detected in several herds of dairy cows and on poultry farms.

And a small part of the virus showed genetic modifications suggesting that it may have mutated inside the body to adapt to human respiratory tract. However, this mutation is not the only one necessary to make a virus more contagious or transmissible between humans, reassure researchers interviewed by AFP.

As the inauguration of Donald Trump approaches, who has expressed his wish to eliminate an agency responsible for preparing for epidemic risks, the situation worries health stakeholders. The outgoing administration is also not exempt from criticism, with experts deeming its response insufficient and warning of shortcomings in terms of contamination monitoring. “We could do so much more,” says Jennifer Nuzzo, who calls in particular for strengthening prevention measures for agricultural workers, including through vaccination.

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