As H5N1 Bird Flu Spreads To More States, Many Are Wondering What Will Happen If People Start Getting Infected… by for End of the American Dream
I have been watching the H5N1 bird flu for a very long time. Many of my readers don’t even know this, but many years ago I actually had an entire website that was dedicated to tracking the latest news regarding bird flu. Fortunately, H5N1 hasn’t been a significant threat for ages, but now it is back. It is spreading very rapidly in birds in North America right now, and some experts are concerned that it could mutate into a version that could begin spreading easily in humans. If that happens, it would make the COVID pandemic look like a bad joke in comparison, because the death rate for H5N1 in humans is extremely high.
Over the past several days, we have received some really troubling news about the spread of bird flu inside the United States.
For example, bird flu has now been detected in a “non-commercial backyard flock” in Suffolk County, New York. The following comes from the official USDA website…
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The United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has confirmed the presence of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) in a non-commercial backyard flock (non-poultry) in Suffolk County, New York.
Samples from the flock were tested at the Cornell University Animal Health Diagnostic Center, part of the National Animal Health Laboratory Network, and confirmed at the APHIS National Veterinary Services Laboratories (NVSL) in Ames, Iowa.
APHIS is working closely with state animal health officials in New York on a joint incident response. State officials quarantined the affected premises, and birds on the properties will be depopulated to prevent the spread of the disease. Birds from the flock will not enter the food system.
And the USDA is also telling us that bird flu has also popped up in the state of Mainefor the first time…
Inspectors with a U.S. Department of Agriculture service have confirmed the presence of the avian influenza in what they describe as a “non-commercial backyard flock (non-poultry)” in Knox County.
Officials with the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) are now working with Maine animal health officials to quarantine the affected property.
In addition, we have just learned that “a fourth commercial poultry flock in southern Indiana” has been hit…
Avian influenza has been detected in a fourth commercial poultry flock in southern Indiana, state officials said Saturday.
Laboratory testing of a second commercial flock of turkeys in Greene County has come back as presumptively positive for the virus, the Indiana State Board of Animal Health said. The samples are being verified at the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Veterinary Services Laboratory in Iowa.
Authorities are doing their best to try to prevent this outbreak from spreading, but it is clearly out of control at this point.
So far, bird flu has actually been detected in wild birds in a total of nine different states…
As of Saturday, over 240 wild birds in South and North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Georgia, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Delaware and Florida had been found to be infected with Eurasian H5 HPAI, with a number of cases specified as H5N1.
Poultry farmers are on high alert all over the nation, because a single case can often mean that an entire flock must be put down.
And the more we lose, the higher chicken prices will go.
But of much greater concern is the possibility that the virus could mutate and start spreading among humans…
“An increase in poultry outbreaks inevitably brings the virus into closer and more frequent proximity to humans, which is always a risk with viruses like influenza that can rapidly evolve,” Dr. Holly Shelton, head of the Influenza Viruses Group at The Pirbright Institute, told The Telegraph.
If H5N1 were to start spreading as widely as COVID has among humans, the death toll would be absolutely catastrophic.
Since 2003, more than half of all human cases of H5N1 have died…
Some 864 human infections and 456 deaths with the H5N1 subtype have been reported in 19 countries since 2003.