Devastating Bird Flu Outbreak Persists in U.S. as Promising Nasal Spray Vaccine Emerges Podcast Por  arte de portada

Devastating Bird Flu Outbreak Persists in U.S. as Promising Nasal Spray Vaccine Emerges

Devastating Bird Flu Outbreak Persists in U.S. as Promising Nasal Spray Vaccine Emerges

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Bird flu, or H5N1 avian influenza, continues its grip on U.S. farms as the outbreak enters its fourth year since February 2022, with over 187 million birds culled nationwide according to USDA data reported by Farm and Dairy. In the past 24 hours, breakthrough research from Washington University School of Medicine announced a promising nasal spray vaccine that showed strong protection against H5N1 in hamsters and mice, outperforming traditional shots by targeting the nose and lungs to block early infection, as detailed in their February 5 study published in Cell Reports Medicine.

Focusing on the U.S., recent outbreaks persist. Colorado state officials confirmed highly pathogenic avian influenza at a Weld County commercial egg-laying facility housing over a million chickens, affecting more than 11 million birds total and prompting a disaster declaration last week, per CBS News Colorado. Mississippi reported its first case of 2026 in Amite County backyard poultry, according to the Mississippi Board of Animal Health via SuperTalk. Nebraska's Game and Parks Commission tracked 150 suspected wild bird cases since March 2025, with 84 during peak migration from late November to January, Nebraska Public Media reported on February 3. Wild bird detections are rising in states like New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia amid winter migration, with Cornell Ag News Center noting increased mortalities in waterfowl and raptors.

Dairy cattle cases, first seen in March 2024, have hit 1,084 across 19 states including Ohio, though none in the last 30 days per Farm and Dairy. Human risk remains low, with CDC reporting 71 U.S. cases and two deaths since 2024, mostly among those handling infected animals; no human-to-human spread.

Experts stress biosecurity: limit visitors, disinfect gear, and isolate from wild birds. Vaccines for poultry face trade hurdles, but innovations like West Virginia University's edible vaccine advance.

Globally, H5N1 circulates in wild birds and mammals, but U.S. cases dominate concerns.

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