Listen "H5N1 Bird Flu Continues Global Spread with 26 Human Cases and Rising Concerns in Southeast Asia and Americas"
Episode Synopsis
Avian Flu Watch: Global H5N1 TrackerWelcome to Avian Flu Watch, where we bring you the latest data and analysis on the worldwide spread of H5N1, also known as bird flu. Today is August 27, 2025.Let’s start with the **numbers**. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, between January and early August 2025, there have been 26 confirmed human H5N1 infections globally. Of these, 23 were reported outside the U.S., leading to 11 deaths. Cambodia leads with 8 fatalities, followed by India with 2, and Mexico with 1. The U.S. has not reported any new human cases since mid-February, but nearly 1,000 dairy cow herds and more than 70 people were affected over the last year, with at least one U.S. fatality, as per The Lancet’s commentary.Hotspots are shifting. Right now, **Southeast Asia remains the epicenter**, especially Cambodia and neighboring regions with intensive poultry farming and live bird markets. In the Americas, sporadic outbreaks continue in Mexico, the U.S., and Central America. The Pan American Health Organization lists almost 1,000 global human cases and a historical case fatality rate close to 50 percent.When visualizing the epidemic trend line, you’d see **sharp spikes** in Southeast Asia and a steep rise between 2022 and 2025 in the Americas, followed by stabilization in the U.S. since spring this year. Outbreaks in dairy cattle since 2024 have noticeably altered the shape and scale of the U.S. trend, prompting a recalibration of surveillance systems.Globally, **cross-border transmission** is increasingly tied to animal movement and migratory bird flyways. Recent mathematical models, as published in Nature Communications, estimate that U.S. West Coast states carry the highest probability of exporting infected cattle. Interstate and international cattle testing protocols, as well as restrictions, have contained spillovers compared to a scenario without controls, but risk persists where coordination is weak.There are both containment successes and failures. The U.S. response, involving rapid diagnostics and targeted trade restrictions, helped halt widespread human transmission after the initial dairy cow outbreaks. In contrast, delays and inconsistent biosecurity in parts of South and Southeast Asia have led to recurring human infections linked to close contact with poultry or livestock.Variant evolution is a key worry. Most recent animal and human cases globally have been attributed to the **B3.13 clade**—responsible for the bulk of U.S. dairy and human infections—but this year’s emergence of the **D1.1 lineage** in Nevada cattle signals ongoing viral adaptation. Experts stress the risks that these new variants present, especially their potential for crossing into new species.As for travel, authorities recommend heightened caution in Southeast Asia, particularly rural Cambodia and other high-incidence regions. Travelers are advised to avoid markets selling live birds and dairy products that are unpasteurized, and to follow public health advisories. There is no current evidence of sustained person-to-person H5N1 transmission globally, but vigilance remains crucial.We’ll continue to observe genetic and geographic shifts, monitoring for signals of greater transmissibility. Thank you for tuning in to Avian Flu Watch. Please come back next week for more data-driven updates. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out QuietPlease Dot A I.For more http://www.quietplease.aiGet the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOtaThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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