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Texan infected with bird flu through dairy cattle
A person in the US state of Texas is recovering from bird flu after being exposed to dairy cattle, officials said Monday amid growing concern over the current global strain of the virus as it spreads to new species.
It is only the second case of a human testing positive for bird flu in the country, and comes after the infection sickened herds that were apparently exposed to wild birds in Texas, Kansas and other states over the past week.
"The patient reported eye redness (consistent with conjunctivitis), as their only symptom, and is recovering," said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). They were told to isolate and are being treated with the antiviral drug used for the flu.
The CDC added that the infection does not change its bird flu human health risk assessment for the US general public, which it rates as low. The first US bird flu case in a human occurred in a Colorado prison inmate in 2022 -- however, that was through infected poultry.
Experts are worried about the increasing number of mammals infected by the current H5N1 strain of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) and its potential spread between mammals, even as cases among humans remain highly rare.
The current outbreak began in 2020 and has led to the deaths of tens of millions of poultry, with wild birds also infected.
- Low risk to humans -
"Initial testing has not found changes to the virus that would make it more transmissible to humans," the US Department of Agriculture, the CDC, and the Food and Drug Administration said in a joint statement last week. The strain was introduced by wild birds but spread between cows hasn't been ruled out, the statement added.
The Texas health department said the cattle infections do not present a concern for the commercial milk supply, as dairies are required to destroy milk from sick cows. Pasteurization also kills any viruses.
It added it was working to provide guidance to affected dairies about how to minimize workers' exposure, and how people who work with affected cattle should monitor for symptoms and get tested.
The findings marked the first time ever that HPAI has been detected in dairy cattle, according to the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA). Earlier in March, Minnesota reported bird flu cases among juvenile goats.
"The detection of HPAI, first in goats and now in dairy cattle, underscores the importance of adherence to biosecurity measures, vigilance in monitoring for disease, and immediately involving your veterinarian when something seems 'off,'" said AVMA President Rena Carlson in a recent statement.
- Boy dead in Cambodia -
The affected cows were primarily older animals that showed decreased lactation and low appetite, "with little to no associated mortality reported," added the AVMA. Dead wild birds were generally found nearby.
A nine-year-old boy died from the virus in Cambodia in February, adding to the three earlier deaths in the kingdom in 2023.
Bird flu killed a polar bear in Alaska last fall, according to state officials, and has killed tens of thousands of marine mammals since spreading in South America, according to the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research.
British seabird populations are suffering "widespread and extensive declines" according to a recent impact assessment.
The disease has hit European farms hard too, with French authorities raising the bird flu risk level to "maximum" in December, ordering breeders to keep poultry indoors, and Czech officials reporting in February they had culled 140,000 birds in 2024 alone.
F.Wilson--AT