It is not inevitable that H5N1 will develop into a pandemic -- if we act now. Unfortunately, instead of urgent action, we ...
Thus far, the outbreak is growing slowly, says Yale SOM’s Dr. Howard Forman. But a lack of coordination and testing continues ...
For the past several years, millions of birds around the world have been killed or culled because of a highly pathogenic form ...
Researchers in Texas detected H5N1 in wastewater from 10 cities, but the risk to humans is currently low. Ongoing ...
The deadly H5N1 avian influenza virus, which has killed millions of birds worldwide since 2021 – and in rare cases can be ...
An extensive study on wastewater samples taken across the United States from May to July found traces of the H5N1 bird flu ...
"The widespread detection of influenza A (H5N1) virus in wastewater from 10 U.S. cities is troubling," the authors concluded.
Three of the four states had corresponding evidence of human influenza activity from other surveillance systems.
A study out of the University of New South Wales (UNSW) has found that high-pathogenicity avian influenza virus (HPAIV) H5N1 ...
Wisconsin’s dairy herds remain free of the H5N1 avian influenza virus. The state has required influenza A testing prior to ...
The authors reported no conflicts of interest. Source Reference: Tisza MJ, et al "Sequencing-based detection of avian ...
is the percentage of the total influenza A reads in wastewater for that site that belong to one of the indicated serotypes (H5N1, H3N2, or H1N1), that remain unassigned (“ambiguous”), or that ...