California health officials reported Tuesday that a child in Alameda County tested positive for H5 bird flu last week.
The source of infection is not known — although health officials are looking into possible contact with wild birds — and the child is recovering at home with mild upper respiratory symptoms.
Health officials have confirmed the "H5" part of the virus, not the "N1." There is no human "H5" flu; it is only associated with birds.
The child was treated with antiviral medication, and the sample was sent to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for confirmatory testing.
The initial test showed low levels of the virus and, according to the state health agency, testing four days later showed no virus.
"The more cases we find that have no known exposure make it difficult to prevent additional" infections, said Jennifer Nuzzo, professor of epidemiology and director of the Brown University School of Public Health's Pandemic Center. "It worries me greatly that this virus is popping up in more and more places and that we keep being surprised by infections in people whom we wouldn't think would be at high risk of being exposed to the virus."
Read more: Canadian teenager infected with H5N1 bird flu in critical condition
A statement from the California Department of Public Health said that none of the child's family members have the virus, although they, too, had mild respiratory symptoms. They are also being treated with antiviral medication.
The child attended a day care while displaying symptoms. People the child may have had contact with have been notified and are being offered preventative antiviral medication and testing.
“It’s natural for people to be concerned, and we want to reinforce for parents, caregivers and families that based on the information and data we have, we don’t think the child was infectious — and no human-to-human spread of bird flu has been documented in any country for more than 15 years,” said CDPH Director and State Public Health Officer Dr. Tomás Aragón.
The case comes days after the state health agency announced the discovery of six new bird flu cases, all in dairy workers. The total number of confirmed human cases in California is 27. This new case will bring it to 28, if confirmed. This is the first human case in California that is not associated with the dairy industry.
The total number of confirmed human cases in the U.S., including the Alameda County child, now stands at 54. Thirty-one are associated with dairy industry, 21 with the poultry industry, and now two with unknown sources.
In Canada, a teenager is in critical condition with the disease. The source of that child's infection is also unknown.
Genetic sequencing of the Canadian teenager's virus shows mutations that may make it more efficient at moving between people. The Canadian virus is also a variant of H5N1 that has been associated with migrating wild birds, not cattle.
Genetic sequencing of the California child's virus has not been released, so it is unclear if it is of wild bird origin, or the one moving through the state's dairy herds.
In addition, WastewaterScan — an infectious disease monitoring network led by researchers from Stanford University and Emory University, with laboratory support from Verily, Alphabet Inc.’s life sciences organization — follows 28 wastewater sites in California. All but six have shown detectable amounts of H5 in the last couple of weeks.
There are no monitoring sites in Alameda Co., but positive hits have been found in several Bay Area wastewater districts, including San Francisco, Redwood City, Sunnyvale, San Jose and Napa.
"This just makes the work of protecting people from this virus and preventing it from mutating to cause a pandemic that much harder," said Nuzzo.
For years, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has leveraged his famous name, his celebrity connections and his nonprofit, Children’s Health Defense, to spread misinformation about vaccines and call their safety and efficacy into question. Soon, he might have the power to go much further.
If Mr. Kennedy is confirmed by the Senate to be secretary of health and human services, he would be in charge of the nation’s pre-eminent public health and scientific agencies, including those responsible for regulating vaccines and setting national vaccine policy.
Legal and public health experts agree that he would not have the authority to take some of the most severe actions, such as unilaterally banning vaccines, which Mr. Kennedy has said he has no intention of doing.
“I’m not going to take anyone’s vaccines away from them,” he wrote on social media last month. “I just want to be sure every American knows the safety profile, the risk profile, and the efficacy of each vaccine.”
But Mr. Kennedy, who has said that he wants federal researchers to pull back from studying infectious diseases, could exert his influence in many other ways. His actions could reduce vaccination rates, delay the development of new vaccines and undermine public confidence in a critical public health tool.
In the last three decades alone, childhood vaccines have prevented more than 500 million cases of disease, 32 million hospitalizations and more than one million deaths in the United States, according to a recent report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But vaccination rates have been falling in recently years, and Mr. Kennedy could accelerate the trend, public health experts said.
“A lot of damage is possible,” said Dr. Thomas Frieden, a former director of the C.D.C. who now leads Resolve to Save Lives, a public health nonprofit. “The secretary of health has a life-or-death responsibility. And if unscientific statements and decisions are made, if agencies are damaged, if public confidence is undermined, then you can get spread of disease.”
Here are five things Mr. Kennedy could do.
He could revise the government’s vaccine recommendations.
As the federal health secretary, Mr. Kennedy would oversee the C.D.C., the agency that issues guidance on which immunizations Americans should get and when.
Health insurers look to those recommendations to determine what vaccines to cover and state health departments use them to inform their own vaccine policies.
Mr. Kennedy would have final say over which experts sit on the external committee that advises the C.D.C. on vaccines, and he would be the boss of the C.D.C. director, who decides whether to adopt that guidance. “That’s, in my mind, a recipe for a disaster,” said Lawrence O. Gostin, an expert in public health law at Georgetown University.
A C.D.C. director or advisory committee that is hesitant toward vaccines could usher in changes in the childhood vaccine schedule, such as removing vaccines from the list of recommended immunizations or changing the ages at which they are advised.
“If the question is purely, could the H.H.S. secretary unilaterally remove vaccines from a schedule or alter the schedule, I think the answer to that would ultimately be no,” said Dr. Michael Mina, an epidemiologist and former professor at Harvard University. “But with a little bit of planning, through like-minded appointments and top-down pressure, the answer to that starts to move the needle toward yes.”
One thing he could not do is abolish vaccine mandates, such as requirements that children receive certain immunizations before attending school. Those are set by state and local governments. The federal health secretary does not have the authority to override them.
But some public health experts fear that some state health authorities, particularly in Republican-led states, could follow a C.D.C. that is skeptical of vaccines. One result might be lower vaccination rates — and worse public health outcomes — in red states than in blue ones, Mr. Gostin said, similar to the pattern that played out with the Covid-19 vaccines.
He could slow vaccine development and approval.
Mr. Kennedy would also be in charge of the F.D.A., the agency responsible for approving new vaccines.
He has repeatedly criticized the agency, which fast-tracked the authorization of the Covid-19 vaccines, as well as the shots themselves. As health secretary, he would not be able to remove them or any other already authorized vaccines from the market without strong scientific evidence, Mr. Gostin said. If he tried, vaccine manufacturers could sue over such a decision and courts would most likely rule in their favor, he said.
But he could bring people who share his views into the F.D.A. Together, they could make the process for approving new vaccines more onerous and lengthy, including requiring more data.
“He could say, ‘I don’t think this has been studied in the right way,’” said Dr. Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and an adviser to the F.D.A.
He could also stop or slow vaccine development research conducted at or funded by the National Institutes of Health, the federal government’s top medical research agency, which would also fall under his purview. He has been clear about his plans to empty some divisions that focus on advancing vaccine research and development. He has said he would fight the next pandemic instead by “building people’s immune systems.”
“I’m going to say to N.I.H. scientists, ‘God bless you all,’” Mr. Kennedy said as a presidential candidate last November. “‘Thank you for public service.’ We’re going to give infectious disease a break for about eight years.”
Infectious diseases are still looming, however. And a slowdown in vaccine research, development or approval could have particularly dire consequences in the event of another public health emergency like Covid-19.
Bird flu, for instance, continues to infect American farm workers, and experts have worried that the virus could evolve to spread more easily among humans. If that happened, “we would be in a new pandemic,” said Jennifer Nuzzo, the director of the Pandemic Center at Brown University. “And that pandemic would move very quickly. Any attempt to not act with urgency would be deadly.”
He could emphasize vaccine side effects.
Decades of scientific study confirm that the benefits of vaccines far outweigh the risks, but like all medications, they carry the possibility of side effects, including some rare but serious ones. Mr. Kennedy — who has said he wants more public visibility into safety data — is poised to draw outsize attention to adverse outcomes.
His nonprofit promotes a database of research that includes hundreds of misleading interpretations of vaccine data. In September, the group released “Vaxxed 3: Authorized to Kill,” a film claiming that Covid vaccines led to “tragic outcomes of either death or serious injury.”
Under Mr. Kennedy, federal agencies like the F.D.A. could highlight potential side effects by requiring vaccine makers to list even very rare ones on the packaging label.
Mr. Kennedy could also draw attention to unverified reports of adverse events collected by federal agencies. “What I would worry about is an abuse of the data,” said Dr. Peter Lurie, the president of the Center for Science in the Public Interest and a former associate commissioner at the F.D.A.
Mr. Kennedy could also push federal agencies to conduct more research into vaccine safety. That would not be a bad thing in itself, said Dr. Ofer Levy, director of the precision vaccines program at Boston Children’s Hospital and an adviser to the F.D.A. “There is more research that can be done, particularly on some of the newer vaccines,” he said.
But, the research must be scientifically rigorous, he added, and build upon decades of scientific evidence related to vaccine safety. “If you signal this to the public as, ‘Well, we have to start from scratch, all of these vaccines are suspect,’ I would disagree with that approach,” Dr. Levy said. “Because many of these vaccines have been very, very well studied, and they’re a huge win for kids.”
He could weaken legal protections for vaccine makers.
Under a longstanding federal law, people who experience serious side effects after receiving certain routine vaccinations are limited in their ability to sue drug companies. Instead, they can seek compensation through a government-run program. The law is intended to encourage drug companies to invest in vaccine development.
Mr. Kennedy could not make major changes to the law without congressional approval, but he could remove specific vaccines from the program. Whether he could take every vaccine off the list is “difficult to say, because it’s uncharted waters, legally speaking,” said Ana Santos Rutschman, an expert on health law and policy at Villanova University.
If vaccines are removed from the program, some companies may decide to stop making them. “And that’s going to have two effects: driving vaccine costs up and reducing availability for those who want the vaccines,” said Dorit Reiss, an expert on vaccine policy and law at the University of California College of the Law, San Francisco.
(And because the program is more favorable to plaintiffs than the courts are, paring down the list could actually make it more difficult for people with vaccine injuries to be compensated, Dr. Reiss added.)
A more recent law also provides liability protections to companies making vaccines for public health emergencies, such as the Covid-19 pandemic. These protections are put in place by a declaration from the secretary of health; in the event of another pandemic, Mr. Kennedy could simply refrain from making one.
Over the longer term, experts said, weakening the liability protections would probably prompt some pharmaceutical companies to abandon vaccine development. “Which, from a public health perspective, may mean fewer vaccines in the future,” Ms. Rutschman said.
He could speak out against vaccines.
Many experts say they worry most about Mr. Kennedy’s bully pulpit. If confirmed, Mr. Kennedy would have a new platform for spreading misinformation about vaccines and amplifying fears about their safety.
“It’s very hard to claw back outrageous ideas when social media algorithms propel them forward,” Dr. Nuzzo said.
Vaccine hesitancy grew during Mr. Trump’s first term as president and persisted after he left office.
Vaccine experts have said that Mr. Kennedy is particularly skilled at taking good, peer-reviewed science and skewing the findings.
Dr. Mina said he expected Mr. Kennedy to “to do exactly what he’s been doing for years: fudging the way that data is meant to be interpreted, using very manipulative tactics to drive a message that makes vaccines look dangerous. He is a master at it — truly a master.”
During a measles outbreak in Samoa in 2019, Mr. Kennedy stoked the skepticism driving the spread. He wrote to the nation’s prime minister on the Children’s Health Defense letterhead, suggesting that the failure of vaccines given to pregnant women and children was the true culprit. More than 50 children died in the outbreak.
RFK Jr. is ‘exactly the wrong pick’ for HHS secretary
Dr. Jennifer Nuzzo, director of Brown University’s Pandemic Center, criticizes President-elect Donald Trump's pick for Health and Human Services secretary.
Canadian health officials announced Tuesday that a teenager infected with H5N1 bird flu from an unknown source is in critical condition.
According to British Columbia Provincial Health Officer Bonnie Henry, the child is suffering from acute respiratory distress and was hospitalized on Friday.
The teen is the first presumptive case of H5N1 bird flu in Canada.
“Our thoughts continue to be with this person and their family,” said Henry.
Authorities believe the virus was acquired via an animal source; however, the teen was not on a farm nor near any known wild birds or backyard poultry — common reservoirs for the disease.
According to a CBC interview with Henry, the teen did not have any contact with birds but did interact with a variety of other animals — including a dog, cats and reptiles — in the days before becoming ill. Testing on those animals has so far been negative.
The health authorities are also tracing people the teen was in contact with; so far they have not identified other infections.
The situation is “horrifying,” said Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center at Brown University. “The idea that we have a child, a teenager, who is seriously ill from this virus is just really an utter tragedy. But sadly, it’s not surprising, given everything we’ve known about H5N1 and its potential to cause illness.”
She noted that since the late 1990s, when this current strain of bird flu originated in China’s Guangdong province, the fatality rate was close to 60%. That number is likely inflated, she said, as presumably most people tested for the disease were those who went to hospitals or clinics to seek treatment; people who had mild symptoms, or were asymptomatic, were likely not tested.
Nevertheless, Nuzzo said, while this virus could “be a lot less deadly than what we’ve seen to date,” it could still be far more deadly than any pandemic we’ve seen in a long time, including COVID.
She said the case causes her concern for three reasons: The first is the severity of the teen’s illness. The second is that “we don’t understand how the teenager got infected,” she said. Her third concern is how government officials are dealing with this outbreak, which she described as “letting it continue to spread from animals to people, without trying to do more to get ahead of it.”
She said the virus may in the end not end up becoming more virulent or efficient at moving between people, “but I don’t think we want to wait around and on the chance that it might.”
Since the virus appeared in North American wild birds in 2021, human cases have mostly presented as mild. Since 2022, there have been 47 human cases in the U.S. — 25 in dairy workers, 21 in poultry workers, and one case in Missouri where the source has not yet been identified.
However, a recent study from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows the virus is more widespread in dairy workers than had previously been assumed. An examination of antibodies in 115 dairy workers from Michigan and Colorado showed that eight people were positive for the disease, or 7% of the study population — indicating that either workers were not reporting illness, or they were asymptomatic.
Nuzzo also pointed to a recent study published in Nature, led by Yoshihiro Kawaoka, an H5N1 expert at the University of Wisconsin, in Madison, that showed the virus that infected the first reported dairy worker in Texas had acquired mutations that made it more severe in animals as well as allowing it to move more efficiently between them — via airborne respiration.
When Kawoaka exposed ferrets to this viral isolate, 100% died. In addition, the amount of virus they were initially exposed to didn’t seem to matter. Even very low doses caused mortality.
Kawoaka told The Times in an interview that the mutations seen in this particular isolate have appeared elsewhere in past outbreaks in birds and mammals, “so in that sense, it’s a very orthodox mutation.”
On Wednesday, Canadian health authorities announced they had genetically sequenced the virus in the teen, and it is the newer D1.1 version that has affected poultry flocks in the Pacific Northwest this fall, and was likely carried by wild birds migrating south. It is not the version being seen in dairy cows or dairy workers, which has been called B3.13. Both are of the H5N1 2.3.4.4b clade that has been wreaking havoc across North and South America since 2021, and in Europe, Asia and Africa since 2020.
Fortunately, the mutated isolate that infected the lone dairy worker in Texas has not been seen since. It’s unclear why the worker did not present with more severe symptoms.
However, there are a few hypotheses.
Kawaoka’s research shows “inefficient replication” of the virus in human corneal cells. If the worker was exposed by a splash of contaminated milk to the eye, or a rub of the eye with a contaminated glove, the virus may have been stalled out — unable to replicate like it could have had the worker been exposed via inhalation.
Nuzzo said there are other hypotheses — which she stressed are just hypotheses — including one that posits people who were exposed to the H1N1 swine flu outbreak in 2009 may have acquired some immunity to the “N1” part of the virus.
The other goes back to a person’s first influenza exposure.
There is a scientific hypothesis called the “original antigenic sin” that suggests that a person’s first exposure to a particular virus “may sort of kind of set the tone” for that person’s immune system going forward — so this worker’s first flu exposure may have provided his immune system with the defenses needed to suppress H5N1.
“There are a lot more questions than answers at this point. So there are a lot of interesting hypotheses for why the more recent cases have been mild, there’s not enough evidence to simply discard more than two decades worth of evidence about this virus that tells us that it could be quite deadly,” said Nuzzo.
As human flu season ramps up, Nuzzo said it’s critically important that people do what they can to prevent the spread of disease.
She said both seasonal flu and H5N1 vaccines should be provided to dairy workers.
Unfortunately, she said, “our surveillance efforts for trying to find outbreaks on farms, while getting better, are still not even close to what we need to know about these outbreaks.”
In the meantime, vaccines and antiviral medications need to be on hand.
“The news of a deeply serious human case of bird flu is a massive wake-up call that should immediately mobilize efforts to prevent another human pandemic,” said Farm Forward Executive Director Andrew deCoriolis. “We could have prevented the spread of bird flu on poultry farms across America, and we didn’t. We could have prevented the spread of bird flu on dairy farms, and we didn’t.”
“Factory farms notorious for raising billions of sickly animals in filthy, cramped conditions provide a recipe for viruses like bird flu (H5N1) to emerge and spread,” said deCoriolis in a statement. “We are now on the cusp of another pandemic and the agencies responsible for regulating farms and protecting public health are moving slower than the virus is spreading.”
As of Wednesday, there have been 492 dairy herds infected with H5N1 across 15 states. More than half, 278, are in California. Two pigs in Oregon have also been infected.
A Canadian teenager is hospitalized in critical condition with bird flu, health officials reported Tuesday.
The teen has been receiving care at BC Children’s Hospital in Vancouver since Friday, the same day an initial test came back positive for H5 influenza. Government testing confirmed that the strain is H5N1, the Public Health Agency of Canada said Wednesday.
The young person’s first symptoms, which began a week before they were hospitalized, were conjunctivitis or red eyes, fever and cough, said Dr. Bonnie Henry, an epidemiologist who is the provincial health officer for British Columbia.
The illness has progressed to acute respiratory distress syndrome, or ARDS. People with ARDS typically need help breathing with machines such as a ventilator, but officials did not offer specifics on the teen’s treatment except to say they’re receiving antiviral medications.
This is the first known human case of bird flu acquired in Canada. The country had one case in 2014, which was travel-related, Henry said.
It is still unknown how the teen caught this strain of flu, which has been circulating widely in wild birds, poultry and some mammals, including cattle in North America since 2022.
“Because this is such a rare event and a sentinel event, it is important for us to do as thorough an investigation as possible, and we’re committed to doing that,” Henry said.
There have also been 46 confirmed human infections in the United States as part of the ongoing outbreak this year, mostly among farm workers tending infected animals. All those cases have been mild, and people who have tested positive have recovered from their illnesses after treatment with antiviral medications.
These cases have all been among adults, however, and Henry said it’s possible that the teen’s case is more severe because as a younger person, they’d had less exposure to seasonal strains of the flu, which may offer some degree cross-protection against H5 bird flu strains.
The teen, who was described as healthy before they caught the virus, began experiencing symptoms November 2. They went to an emergency room, were sent home and returned to the hospital a few days later when their condition got worse.
Canadian officials are following more than 40 people who had contact with the teen during their infectious period, which started two days before they began experiencing symptoms.
“I will also say that there are many other tests that are being done on a number of people across the province to try and really get an understanding of what’s happening here,” Henry said.
Officials have no other evidence of anyone else becoming ill after contact with the teen.
“We don’t see right now that there’s a risk of a lot of people being sick,” she said.
More than two dozen poultry farms in British Columbia have been affected by H5N1, Henry said. Since 2022, about 11 million birds have been destroyed, with most of them in British Columbia. Unlike in the US, H5N1 has not been detected dairy cattle or milk in Canada.
“We are looking very, very carefully at all potential animal exposures, bird exposures. There were other pets in the house, and there was contact with pets in other houses,” Henry said. The teen had contact with dogs, cats and reptiles, but none has tested positive for H5N1. Investigators have not identified any contact between the teen and birds.
“Right now, we have no specific source identified, but the testing is ongoing in partnerships with our veterinary colleagues, and we’ll be continuing that investigation very thoroughly,” she added.
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says that the current public health risk remains low but that it’s continuing to monitor the outbreak.
“This is a tragic development. It is an unfortunately unsurprising development,” said Dr. Jennifer Nuzzo, who directs the Pandemic Center at the Brown University School of Public Health.
“I think there’s been a lot of wishful thinking about this virus, that it wouldn’t cause people to become severely ill, but that hope, really, I think, stands in contrast to several decades worth of data,” she said.
Since 2003, over 900 human cases of H5N1 have been reported to the World Health Organization. Slightly more than half have been fatal.
“What I think this absolutely underscores is that H5N1 is a very serious public health threat, and we need to be doing more to stay ahead of it, to prevent more people from becoming severely ill or die,” Nuzzo said.
Eight out of 115 dairy workers, or 7%, who worked with H5N1-infected cows in Michigan and Colorado have antibodies to bird flu, according to a new study from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) – a rate significantly higher than known cases of the highly pathogenic virus, which means existing efforts are not protecting, diagnosing and treating people at risk, experts said.
It could become even harder to detect cases amid the fall migration of wild birds, the upcoming human flu season, and repercussions of the second Trump administration’s proposed policies to curtail public health and expand deportation of immigrants, who serve as the backbone of the agricultural workforce in the US.
The new survey from the CDC and state health departments looked at blood samples from people who worked with H5-infected cows in Michigan and Colorado between June to August 2024.
Out of the eight people who had previously undetected cases of the highly pathogenic bird flu, four remembered having symptoms, mostly conjunctivitis, and the other four did not recall having symptoms.
All eight workers were Spanish speakers who reported milking infected cows or cleaning milk parlors. None of them wore respirators, and less than half wore eye protection like goggles.
Notably, only one person said they had worked with infected cows, even though all of them were working with cows on farms with known infections – pointing to barriers in workers understanding the risks they face.
“It really speaks to the importance of more on-farm training around H5 as well as ways to protect from H5,” Demetre Daskalakis, director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, told reporters on Thursday.
The news of cases that flew beneath the radar is “completely unsurprising”, said Jennifer Nuzzo, the director of the Pandemic Center and a professor of epidemiology at Brown University School of Public Health.
“When you test people at their place of work, and if the consequence of testing positive is that they have to stay home and possibly not earn an income, you should expect that people might not tell you if they’ve had symptoms. Also, everything we know about flu gives us the very strong suspicion that there would be asymptomatic infections,” Nuzzo said.
Until now, the CDC has recommended testing only people who report symptoms after having direct animal contact.
“We are not doing enough to make sure that we are protecting people from getting infected and certainly making sure that people who are infected get access to medicines that could potentially keep them from getting severely ill,” Nuzzo said.
The CDC is now bolstering measures to protect workers, including expanding recommendations to test farm workers who are exposed to the virus but don’t develop symptoms, and offering those workers access to flu antivirals.
“We in public health need to cast a wider net in terms of who is offered a test so that we can identify, treat and isolate those individuals,” Nirav Shah, the CDC’s principal deputy director, said on Thursday. Identifying cases and treating people helps to keep a mild infection from turning into a severe one – and it reduces the chances that the virus will spread onward among people.
“The less room we give this virus to run, the fewer chances it has to cause harm or to change,” Shah said. The agency is also improving guidance and education on the importance of personal protective equipment.
“Because we haven’t seen severe illness and deaths yet, I think there’s been some complacency around trying to control this virus, but I’ve always said we shouldn’t wait for farm workers to die before we take action to protect them,” Nuzzo said. “I just don’t think you should gamble with people’s lives like that.”
She believes existing stockpiles of H5N1 vaccines should be offered to farm workers, pending their authorization from regulatory agencies. Vaccines can help prevent severe illness, particularly among a population that may be hesitant to come forward with an illness that could jeopardize their job or even their ability to stay in the country.
“Just offer it for people who may want to protect themselves,” Nuzzo said. “This virus is not going away. This virus is going to represent an even greater threat to human health as it continues to find its way into more and more US farms.”
If the “moral imperative” to protect agricultural workers doesn’t move Americans, perhaps the economic effects of higher costs of milk, eggs and meat will, she said. “Nobody wants the cost of groceries to be any higher than they already are.”
So far, there have been 46 official cases of H5N1 diagnosed in people this year, more than half of which have been among dairy farmworkers. Another nine people have now been identified by blood testing, for a total of 55 people affected by bird flu in 2024.
Other influenza variants will soon begin circulation in people this fall, which raises the possibility of reassortment – a process where different flu variants combine and potentially gain worse attributes.
“By allowing this virus to circulate, we could give it a runway to develop the ability to more easily infect people, and crucially, to be able to spread easily between people,” Nuzzo said. “If the virus can do that, we will be in a new pandemic.”
Dairy workers who’ve been exposed to bird flu should be tested for the virus even if they don’t have symptoms and be offered Tamiflu to cut their risk of getting sick, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday.
The recommendation coincides with a new report finding asymptomatic bird flu infection in some workers. Those cases were discovered using blood, or serology, testing and seem to have been transmitted from sick animals, not people.
“There is nothing that we’ve seen in the new serology data that gives us any concern about person-to-person transmission,” Dr. Nirav Shah, the CDC’s principal deputy director, said during a media briefing.
To date, 46 people have been diagnosed with bird flu, also known as H5N1, in the United States this year. All but one of those patients had been exposed to sick cattle or poultry on farms.
Most cases have been reported in California (21), Washington (11) and Colorado (10).
The new CDC study looked at blood tests from workers at 115 dairy farms who were exposed to H5N1 over the summer in either Colorado or Michigan.
Of those 115, eight (7%) had antibodies showing they’d been infected with the bird flu.
“All eight reported milking cows or cleaning the milking parlor,” Dr. Demetre Daskalakis, who heads the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said during the call. Masks and safety goggles were rare.
“None wore respiratory protection, and less than half wore eye protection,” Daskalakis said.
Most of those found with H5N1 said they’d had red, itchy eyes with drainage.
But four of the eight who were infected didn’t recall ever being sick.
Until now, workers who had a known exposure to bird flu but didn’t have symptoms haven’t been routinely tested. The new results clearly show cases have been missed — a concern that veterinarians have had since the spring.
The CDC is now “intensifying” recommendations meant to protect farmworkers, Shah said. “We in public health need to cast a wider net in terms of who is offered a test so that we can identify, treat and isolate those individuals,” he said.
The new advice is to test anyone with a significant bird flu exposure, such as an unprotected worker who’s been splashed in the face with raw milk on a dairy farm with known H5N1 infections in the herds.
Even if the person never feels ill, that worker should be tested and given the antiviral drug Tamiflu to reduce their risk of ever developing symptoms or passing the virus to close contacts.
This is a move the CDC should have made months ago, said Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center at the Brown University School of Public Health.
“We’ve always suspected strongly and now have confirmation that that was going to miss people who are infected,” Nuzzo said. “This is very bad because one of these infections could turn out to be serious.”
All the H5N1 cases reported so far this year have been mild, including pinkeye and some minor coughs or sneezes. No one has died.
That runs counter to previous H5N1 mortality rate estimates from other parts of the world suggesting more than half of those who become infected die.
Daskalakis said that could be because “not all H5N1s are built the same. These are potentially different genotypes.”
There is no indication that the commercial milk or beef supplies have been affected, the Food and Drug Administration has said.
_______________________________
Erika Edwards
Erika Edwards is a health and medical news writer and reporter for NBC News and "TODAY."
Mustafa Fattah
Mustafa Fattah is a medical fellow with the NBC News Health and Medical Unit.
Learn the bipartisan lessons of the past to prevent future biological crises
For decades, American presidential administrations of both parties have made combatting biological threats a priority on their national security to-do list. In 2020, I spoke out about President Donald Trump’s mishandling of the COVID-19 pandemic and dismissiveness towards bipartisan lessons and preparedness tools his team received when he entered office. Though no administration could have been perfectly prepared for COVID, the results of Trump’s disregard were predictable; when the virus struck, chaos ensued. Instead of uniting in the face of crisis, states and cities were left divided and competing for scarce resources. Americans suffered and lives were lost as a result.
Looking forward, important new plans and response playbooks have emerged not only from COVID-19, but from the many additional outbreaks the United States has fought over the last four years from mpox to H5N1 influenza, to Marburg. I draw hope from state and local innovations, such as those uncovered by the American Democracy and Health Security Initiative. The federal government and our nation’s governors, mayors, tribal leaders, school administrators, businesses and community organizations learned precious lessons, which must be preserved. The path ahead for our nation’s biodefense is clear: we must lean into and build on this vital work.
In this spirit, the administration should reject a biosecurity to-do list that sows divisiveness, driving Democrats and Republicans into their respective corners and failing to capitalize on hard-fought lessons from states, cities, and tribes. Instead, it should adopt a bipartisan biosecurity agenda that protects all Americans by onshoring and friend-shoring critical supplies, while simultaneously bolstering global financing solutions that enable low- and lower-middle-income countries to access countermeasures and stop outbreaks at the source. It should double down on investing in the 100 Days Mission, an effort built on Operation Warp Speed, achieve safe and effective vaccines, tests, and treatments for every potentially pandemic pathogen. And it must strengthen preparedness to deter and guard against the potential for deliberate or accidental biological misuse.
Such an agenda would recognize that biological disasters affect everyone, everywhere, all at once and that Americans can only be safe from disease threats if diseases are fought and stopped everywhere in the world. Crucially, this means doubling down on the US target to assist at least 50 countries with health security capacity and catalyze capacity in 50 more through a strong Pandemic Fund. It would require not only remaining at the table in the World Health Assembly, the governing body of the World Health Organization (WHO), but also using that seat to play a stronger leadership role in advancing global health security. Conversely, walking away would have negative impacts on Americans and create space for competitors and adversaries that seek harm to our interests. And it would mean working to build the world’s strongest bioeconomy, safeguarding emerging biotechnologies against deliberate and accidental misuse, and building capacity to detect and respond to disease threats around the world.
Finally, to achieve these goals, the incoming administration must adopt and invest in the work of the National Security Council’s Directorate on Global Health Security and Biodefense and the White House Office on Pandemic Preparedness and Response. These non-partisan experts have spent years building a national and global firefighting team to enhance American readiness for biological threats. This team should be empowered and expanded, not shuttered.
It’s highly likely the incoming administration will have to deal with a major health emergency very early in its tenure. In 2025, we will learn whether the new administration will pick up where it left off or whether it can turn the page on past pandemic performance and prevent future biological catastrophes.
–Elizabeth (Beth) Cameron is a professor of the practice and senior advisor to the Pandemic Center at the Brown University School of Public Health.
Marburg virus is notorious for its killing ability. In past outbreaks, as many as 9 out of 10 patients have died from the disease. And there are no approved vaccines or medications.
That was the grim situation in Rwanda just over a month ago, when officials made the announcement that nobody wants to make: The country was in the midst of its first Marburg outbreak.
Now those same Rwandan officials have better news to share. Remarkably better.
“We are at a case fatality rate of 22.7% — probably among the lowest ever recorded [for a Marburg outbreak],” said Dr. Yvan Butera, the Rwandan Minister of State for Health at a press conference hosted by Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday.
There’s more heartening news: Two of the Marburg patients, who experienced multiple organ failure and were put on life support, have now been extubated — had their breathing tubes successfully removed — and have recovered from the virus.
“We believe this is the first time patients with Marburg virus have been extubated in Africa,” says Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director general of the World Health Organization. “These patients would have died in previous outbreaks.”
The number of new cases in Rwanda has also dwindled dramatically, from several a day to just 4 reported in the last two weeks, bringing the total for this outbreak to 66 Marburg patients and 15 deaths.
“It's not yet time to declare victory, but we think we are headed in a good direction,” says Butera. Public health experts are already using words like “remarkable,” “unprecedented” and “very, very encouraging” to characterize the response.
How did Rwanda — an African country of some 14 million — achieve this success? And what can other countries learn from Rwanda’s response?
Doing the basics really well
Rwanda is known for the horrific 1994 genocide — one of the worst in modern times. Since then, the country has charted a different path. In 20 years, life expectancy increased by 20 years from 47.5 years old in 2000 to 67.5 years old in 2021 — about double the gains seen across the continent. And Rwanda has spent decades building up a robust health-care system.
“The health infrastructure, the health-care providers in Rwanda — they're really, really great,” says Dr. Craig Spencer, an emergency physician and professor at Brown University School of Public Health. Spencer specializes in global health issues and has been following the Rwandan outbreak closely.
There are well-run hospitals and well-trained nurses and doctors, he says. There are laboratories that can quickly do diagnostic testing. There is personal protective equipment for medical workers.
For this outbreak, there was the know-how and infrastructure to set up a separate Marburg treatment facility. That's been a boon for other patients and medical staff, preventing exposure to the virus — which crosses over from bats to humans and can be transmitted through bodily fluids like blood, sweat and diarrhea.
And even though there aren't approved medications to treat Marburg, patients in Rwanda have received good supportive care for all their symptoms — like the IV fluids critical for symptoms like high fevers, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea.
This stands in stark contrast to the response in past Marburg scenarios. For example, the Democratic Republic of Congo — next door to Rwanda — had an outbreak between 1998 and 2000. Dr. Daniel Bausch, now a professor at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and an expert in tropical diseases like Marburg, provided care in that outbreak. He says what the country’s health centers were able to offer patients was rudimentary at best.
“We called it a care center or treatment center, but really it was a separate mud hut that people were placed in. We didn't have really anything available to us,” he remembers. “People were lucky that they got paracetamol, or Tylenol, and some fluids to drink, if they could get them down without the nausea and vomiting preventing them.”
In the world's 18 recorded Marburg outbreaks, the mortality rate varies considerably. Several small outbreaks have had fatality rates below 30% but the largest outbreak — in Angola in 2004 and 2005 — had a case fatality rate of 90% with 252 cases and 227 deaths.
Rwanda’s “more modern medical centers” make a big difference, Bausch says.
Getting to patients lickety-split
It wasn’t just the caliber of care that made a difference. It’s also the speed with which patients get care.
As soon as the outbreak started, Rwandan officials jump-started a major operation to trace the contacts of those who were infected, monitoring the health of over 1,000 family members, friends, health-care workers and others at risk. They also started door-to-door surveillance in neighborhoods where there might have been an exposure.
And they did a lot of testing – over 6,000 tests, especially among health-care workers, who’ve comprised 80% of the Marburg patients in this outbreak.
Spencer says many of these capabilities were built up during the COVID pandemic and could be rolled out rapidly. “In Rwanda, you have providers able — within hours really of this outbreak being declared — to get tested,” says Spencer, who has worked with Doctors Without Borders treating Ebola patients. “[Rwanda’s testing is] absolutely remarkable in terms of the response.”
This surveillance and testing allowed “us to detect cases quickly and provide them with treatments in the very, very early phases of their diseases,” explains Butera. He says that caring for patients before they become critically ill likely helped lower the mortality rate.
Embracing experimental vaccines and medications
Rwanda’s speed carried over into other anti-Marburg efforts.
“Everything I have witnessed was really expedited,” says WHO’s Ghebreyesus, who visited Rwanda last week and said what he saw was “very, very encouraging.”
While there are no vaccines or treatments approved for Marburg, Rwanda acted quickly to get experimental vaccines and treatments to people at the center of the outbreak.
“I can't imagine another scenario in which a country went from identifying this outbreak to just over a week later having investigational [experimental] vaccines in country already being provided to frontline health-care workers,” says Spencer, who adds the doses started being administered the same day they arrived in the country. The nonprofit Sabin Vaccine Institute provided the doses, which were developed with major support from the U.S. government.
“I rarely, rarely use the word unprecedented in global health response” Spencer says, but this speed was “unprecedented.”
The vaccine itself is still in development. Testing has shown that it’s safe — but not whether it actually works. Nonetheless, Rwanda decided to inoculate those at risk, hoping that it would help.
Those officials also decided to vaccinate without a randomized controlled trial, where a segment of the recipients get a placebo. Some in the international scientific community say this was a missed opportunity to start learning whether the vaccine is effective — although they concede that it’s far more complicated and slow to roll out a trial. And the size of the outbreak was unlikely to yield enough data to be conclusive.
Did the vaccines help stop the spread or reduce the mortality rate? It’s impossible to know, says Bausch. He points out that in the first recorded Marburg outbreak — in 1967 in Marburg, Germany and what was then Yugoslavia — the mortality rate was 23% with only good supportive care.
Meanwhile, in Rwanda, the next round of vaccines will go to at-risk groups, including mine workers who are in close proximity to the fruit bats that can spread Marburg; that vaccine effort will be randomized.
In addition to the vaccines, Rwanda very swiftly started giving patients two medications — an antiviral called Remdesivir and a monoclonal antibody. As with the vaccine, they hoped these treatments would help even though they haven’t been approved for Marburg.
An early stumble, a course correction
In addition to the speed and high-quality patient care, there’s another less glamorous — but equally important — dimension to quashing Marburg and other viruses, says Bausch. It’s infection control: basically, ensuring Marburg patients don’t infect others. In the hospital, this means that staff take precautions like wearing gowns, masks and double gloves. In public, it can mean sanitizing shared items like motorcycle helmets and installing handwashing stations in public places, as Rwanda has done.
Rwanda stumbled early on with infection control. That’s because it took a couple weeks to diagnose the disease in the individual who is considered the first patient in this outbreak — and the first known Marburg case in the country.
That individual, who likely contracted the virus from exposure to fruit bats in a mining cave, also had a severe case of malaria. Clinicians did not determine that Marburg was also present until other people around that patient started falling ill. As a result, many health care workers were exposed before infection control measures were improved.
While Rwanda rapidly improved their infection control once officials understood what they were dealing with — and not just in health facilities. The mining community linked to the initial patient has seen several cases. So surveillance needs to be sure to cover those populations, says Rob Holden, WHO’s incident manager for Marburg.
“As we go forward, we fine tune, we refine, we reinforce all our surveillance systems, our contact follow ups, our investigations, and we leave no stone unturned,” he says. “If we let our guard down, then I think we'll end up with some nasty surprises and a very long tail on this outbreak.”
Spencer agrees. But he is optimistic. He says that Rwanda’s robust health infrastructure and speedy response has helped protect the rest of the world from a much bigger Marburg outbreak.
NEW YORK (AP) — A pig at an Oregon farm was found to have bird flu, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced Wednesday. It’s the first time the virus has been detected in U.S. swine and raises concerns about bird flu’s potential to become a human threat.
The infection happened at a backyard farm in Crook County, in the center of the state, where different animals share water and are housed together. Last week, poultry at the farm were found to have the virus, and testing this week found that one of the farm’s five pigs had become infected.
The farm was put under quarantine and all five pigs were euthanized so additional testing could be done. It’s not a commercial farm, and U.S. agriculture officials said there is no concern about the safety of the nation’s pork supply.
But finding bird flu in a pig raises worries that the virus may be hitting a stepping stone to becoming a bigger threat to people, said Jennifer Nuzzo, a Brown University pandemic researcher.
Pigs can be infected with multiple types of flu, and the animals can play a role in making bird viruses better adapted to humans, she explained. The 2009 H1N1 flu pandemic had swine origins, Nuzzo noted.
“If we’re trying to stay ahead of this virus and prevent it from becoming a threat to the broader public, knowing if it’s in pigs is crucial,” Nuzzo said.
The USDA has conducted genetic tests on the farm’s poultry and has not seen any mutations that suggest the virus is gaining an increased ability to spread to people. That indicates the current risk to the public remains low, officials said.
A different strain of the bird flu virus has been reported in pigs outside the U.S. in the past, and it did not trigger a human pandemic.
“It isn’t a one-to-one relationship, where pigs get infected with viruses and they make pandemics,” said Troy Sutton, a Penn State researcher who studies flu viruses in animals.
This version of bird flu — known as Type A H5N1 — has been spreading widely in the U.S. among wild birds, poultry, cows and a number of other animals. Its persistence increases the chances that people will be exposed and potentially catch it, officials say.
It isn’t necessarily surprising that a pig infection was detected, given that so many other animals have had the virus, experts said.
The Oregon pig infection “is noteworthy, but does it change the calculation of the threat level? No it doesn’t,” Sutton said. If the virus starts spreading more widely among pigs and if there are ensuing human infections, “then we’re going to be more concerned.”
So far this year, nearly 40 human cases have been reported — in California, Colorado, Washington, Michigan, Texas and Missouri — with mostly mild symptoms, including eye redness, reported. All but one of the people had been to contact with infected animals.
____________________________
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
U.S. agriculture officials said Wednesday that a pig on a backyard farm in Oregon had tested positive for the H5N1 bird flu, raising worries that the virus that is now spreading among U.S. dairy cattle could eventually pose a risk to humans.
Although H5N1 has been found in a long list of wild and domestic mammal species in the U.S. since 2022, including black bears and house cats, an infection in a pig could have bigger implications.
That’s because human and bird flu viruses can mix inside pigs to create new viruses that have, in the past, caused influenza pandemics. The 2009 swine flu pandemic was caused by a pig virus with bird flu genes.
“This is an unsurprising but worrisome development,” said Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center at Brown University’s School of Public Health, in an email to Barron’s. “Virologists have long worried about avian influenza viruses spending time in pigs because it could make it easier for the virus to be able to infect and spread between humans.”
The U.S. Department of Agriculture said Wednesday that one of five pigs on a backyard, non-commercial farm in Crook County, Ore., had tested positive for H5N1 on Tuesday.
Poultry on the farm tested positive for H5N1 last week. H5N1 tests were negative for two of the pigs, while the results of two more tests are still pending.
The agency said that the livestock and poultry on the farm had shared water sources, housing, and equipment. Genetic sequencing of the virus taken from the pig is not yet available, meaning that it’s not yet possible to tell whether the virus is the same strain of H5N1 moving through U.S. dairy farms.
If not, the animals on the backyard farm could have contracted the virus from wild birds, which carry different strains of H5N1.
For now, the implications of the positive test remain unclear, and it’s likely good news that the pig infection occurred on a small farm, not at a large pig operation.
While H5N1 has been found in nearly 400 dairy herds across the U.S., according to the USDA, and led to the destruction of tens of millions of domestic poultry, only a handful of humans has been sickened during the current outbreak.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says there have been 36 human cases in the U.S. this year, virtually all of them in farm workers, and virtually all of them mild.
The worry from experts is that the presence of the virus in pigs could allow it to evolve in a way that might make it more dangerous to humans.
“The virus that caused last influenza pandemic we had—the one that occurred in 2009—likely went from pigs to humans,” Nuzzo said. “This new finding increases our worries that H5N1 could gain the abilities to cause a human pandemic.”
While scientists have seen H5N1-infected pigs in a handful of other countries, the virus has never before been seen in pigs in the U.S.
“For me, it’s another wake-up call to be vigilant, especially for our pig producers,” Dr. Marie Culhane, a professor at the University of Minnesota College of Veterinary Medicine, told Barron’s.
Culhane said that most pigs in the U.S. are kept indoors, not in outdoor farmyards.
“When we mix species together, there’s always that risk that we’re going to share diseases,” Culhane said. “As much as it’s nice to have Old MacDonald’s farm… it just increases the chances you’re going to share virus, and that’s what happened here.”
Dr. Jennifer Nuzzo, DrPH, a professor of epidemiology and director of the Pandemic Center at the Brown University School of Public Health, is one of 100 new members to join the National Academy of Medicine (NAM) as part of its 2024 class. Among the reasons cited for Dr. Nuzzo’s election was her role in “co-creating the Global Health Security Index and conducting research to measure and improve national preparedness for infectious disease threats.”
Working in partnership with NTI’s Global Biological Policy & Programs (NTI | bio) and Economist Impact, Dr. Nuzzo demonstrated critical leadership in developing the 2019 and 2021 versions of the Global Health Security (GHS) Index. The Index measures capacities of 195 countries to prevent and prepare for epidemics and pandemics, analyzing more than 60,000 data points across the traditional prevention, detection, and response measures. The Index is the only comprehensive, independent tool that quantitatively assesses the global baseline of preparedness for catastrophic biological threats in a way that can be repeated every few years.
“We have experienced first-hand Dr. Nuzzo’s impressive dedication to making the world safer from infectious disease threats. We are grateful for Jennifer’s partnership and expertise in developing the GHS Index, and we are so pleased that her work on this critical initiative has been recognized by the National Academy of Medicine. It is a well-deserved honor,” NTI | bio Vice President Dr. Jaime Yassif said.
NAM also recognized Dr. Nuzzo’s efforts to co-establish a global COVID-19 testing data tracker and to create a health systems resilience checklist for biological emergencies.
One of three academies that comprise the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine in the United States, NAM membership reflects the height of professional achievement and commitment to service.
A new exercise, highlighting the ability of Artificial Intelligence (AI) to meet pandemic threats, will be tested this week at the Munich Security Conference.
The Advance Warning and Response Exemplars (AWARE) project will identify positive outliers in successful early warning and response to significant public health events, including outbreaks of pathogens of pandemic potential as well as climate-sensitive infectious diseases
The Pandemic Center sat down with Mr. Ledesma to dive into the results of his recent paper on pandemic preparedness, its impact on mortality rates during the COVID-19 pandemic, and what it can tell decision makers.