Bird flu: ‘Strong evidence’ suggests virus has passed from mammals to humans for first time | Science & Tech News

Hundreds of people have been infected with the H5N1 virus since 2003 but, until now, they have all caught it from birds. The current bird flu outbreak in the States has seen herds of dairy farm cows infected in nine states.

By Thomas Moore, Science correspondent @SkyNewsThomas


Scientists fear bird flu has spread from mammals to humans for the first time, marking another step in the evolution of the deadly virus.

New analysis concludes there is “strong evidence” that a Texas farm worker who tested positive for the H5N1 virus caught it from sick dairy cattle.

Although there have been other people infected with the virus in recent years – including some who have died – they all acquired it from birds.

There is growing concern about the failure of American authorities to contain the spread of the virus.

So far 36 herds in nine states have tested positive. But testing of milk has suggested the virus has spread far more widely.

The longer it spreads unchecked in a domesticated mammal, the greater the chance of it becoming adapted to a new species – and being passed on to humans who have close contact.

According to the report in The New England Journal of Medicine, the unidentified man’s symptoms were mild. He developed the eye infection conjunctivitis but had no fever and no trouble breathing. His lungs were also clear.

He and the people he lived with were given antiviral drugs as a precaution. Nobody else became ill.

How does bird flu spread?

The team, which included researchers from the Centres for Disease Control, said: “Given the infected human was a dairy farm worker with reported exposure to sick, presumably infected cows in Texas and without reported exposure to other mammals or birds, we believe the genetic and epidemiological data are strong evidence of infection of the human following exposure to presumably virus-infected cows.”

Some mammals infected

The highly pathogenic strain of H5N1 has been spread worldwide by wild birds.

At first it was largely poultry that were infected, with millions culled to prevent further spread.

But there have been some mammals infected, including small numbers of foxes, seals and dolphins in the UK.

There have also been suspicions that the virus has spread between farmed mink and within sealion colonies.

But there was surprise when it cropped up in the US in dairy cows, who were suffering from a sharp reduction in milk production.

Virus been spreading for months

Evidence suggests the virus has been spreading undetected since the start of the year. Some cows are asymptomatic.

More from Sky News:
First wild animal seen using plant as medicine
Face of 75,000-year-old Neanderthal woman reconstructed



Image:
Bird flu has been found in seals in the US and UK. Pic: AP

The scientists believe the man could have been infected either by an airborne virus in the milking parlour landing in his eyes, or by a virus on his hands or gloves being transferred to his eyes.

Although the farm worker only had a mild infection, H5N1 can be severe – and even fatal – for humans.

According to the World Health Organisation, 888 people have been infected worldwide between 2003 and the end of March this year, with 463 deaths.

Beef and dairy products safe

US authorities have detected viral fragments – but not active virus – in pasteurised milk. They say dairy products and beef are safe.

Follow Sky News on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News

Tap here

In the UK, a risk assessment by government scientists has concluded the threat of a similar outbreak in dairy herds is very small.

They say animals are kept in different conditions, and there is little chance of the cow flu being carried by wild birds across the Atlantic.

Reference

Denial of responsibility! Elite News is an automatic aggregator of Global media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, and all materials to their authors. For any complaint, please reach us at – [email protected]. We will take necessary action within 24 hours.
DMCA compliant image

Leave a comment