Home Health Influenza Dr Henry delivers H5N1 avian flu update

Dr Henry delivers H5N1 avian flu update

H5N1 is prevalent in migratory waterfowl | The virus doesn't seem to transmit easily to humans.

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Dr Bonnie Henry provided an update on H5N1 on Nov 26, 2024 in Victoria. [livestream]
ISLAND SOCIAL TRENDS Holiday Season COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Tuesday November 26, 2024 | VICTORIA, BC

by Mary P Brooke, B.Sc. | Island Social Trends


BC Provincial Health Officer Dr Bonnie Henry has given an update today in Victoria about the case of H5N1 avian influenza that was contracted by a teenager in the Fraser Valley area of the BC lower mainland.

The infected teen is still in critical condition and not breathing on their own. This information has been made available by the patient’s family and the hospital care team, said Dr Henry.

The teen was not in school when infectious to others.

The family’s pet dog was thoroughly tested and has no evidence of picking up H5N1, said Dr Henry though some of the family members are within the 10-day incubation period.

The virus seems closest to H5N1 found in some geese in the lower mainland in early October. People are advised to avoid bogs and marshy areas where wild birds assemble at this time of year; the feces can contain the H5N1 virus.

The contact tracing phase is now closed.

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Poultry workers:

Poultry workers wear personal protective equipment and take precautions, so there’s not been evidence of infection transmission among poultry workers.

Found in unpasteurized milk in the USA:

H5N1 has been found recently in raw unpasteurized milk in the United States, said Dr Henry today. She called that a reminder of how challenging the viral spread could potentially be.

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Not spillover easily:

“H5N1 does not seem to spill over into humans very easily. That’s the good news. But we need to assess the risk and ensure the virus isn’t changing,” she told media today.

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Full BC Health news release (dated November 26, 2024):

Final update on human avian influenza case in B.C.

An extensive, multi-agency public-health investigation into an avian influenza case involving a B.C. teenager has identified no additional cases nor evidence of human-to-human transmission.

The goals of the investigation were to identify any contacts who may have had exposure to the teenager, determine the source of exposure, and ensure that there was no risk of new infections from either the teenager or animal sources. The investigation also included testing of household pets, birds and other animals from nearby premises, and environmental (soil, water) testing.

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Dr Bonnie Henry provided an update on H5N1 on Nov 26, 2024 in Victoria. [livestream]

To date, all tests on humans, animals and environmental samples related to this investigation have been negative for influenza H5. While it is reassuring that no further cases have been identified, officials have also not been able to definitively identify the source of the young person’s infection.

The investigation has determined the teenager was infected with the same strain of influenza H5N1 currently circulating in wild birds and poultry in B.C. (Clade 2.3.4.4b, Genotype D1.1). Advanced testing at the BC Centre for Disease Control (BCCDC) Public Health Laboratory determined the whole genome sequence of the virus most closely matches that of wild birds found in the Fraser Valley area in October and was not directly related to outbreaks at poultry farms in B.C.

“Our thoughts continue to be with this young person as they remain in critical condition, and their family,” said Dr. Bonnie Henry, B.C.’s provincial health officer. “I am confident in the extensive public health investigation that was led by the Fraser Health team in partnership with the BCCDC Public Health Laboratory, our partners at BC Children’s Hospital and the chief veterinary officer. Though we have not been able to determine definitively the source of exposure, we were able to rule out many potential risks and ensure there are no further cases related to this young person.”

While this was the first case of H5N1 in a person in B.C. and the first acquired in Canada, there have been a small number of human cases in the U.S. this year, including one reported in a child in California last week.

Health, animal and environmental partners across B.C. have also been working together and with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and other national and U.S. partners to respond to the increased detections of H5N1 avian influenza in poultry farms and wild birds in the province since early October.

Prevention measures
To protect yourself against avian influenza, the following prevention measures are recommended:

  • * Stay up to date on all immunizations, especially the seasonal flu vaccine.
  • * Do not touch sick or dead animals or their droppings and do not bring sick wild animals into your home.
  • * Keep your pets away from sick or dead animals and their feces.
  • * Report dead or sick birds or animals.
    * For poultry or livestock, contact the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) Animal Health office: https://inspection.canada.ca/en/about-cfia/contact-cfia-office-telephone
  • * For pets, contact your veterinarian or call the BC Animal Health Centre at 1 800 661-9903
  • * For wild birds, contact the BC Wild Bird Mortality Line: 1 866 431-2473
  • * For wild mammals, contact the BC Wildlife Health Program: 1 250 751-7246

If you have been exposed to sick or dead birds or animals or work on farm where avian influenza has been detected, watch for symptoms of influenza-like illness. If you get symptoms within 10 days after exposure to sick or dead animals, tell your health-care provider that you have been in contact with sick animals and are concerned about avian influenza. This will help them give you appropriate advice on testing and treatment. Stay home and away from others while you have symptoms.

About avian influenza
Avian influenza viruses occur naturally among wild aquatic birds and spread easily from bird to bird. Since 2022, there has been unprecedented global spread of avian influenza caused by the H5N1 virus. While it mostly affects birds, it can affect other animals too. In addition to cases reported in wild birds and poultry farms in North America, the virus has infected mammals including dairy cattle, foxes, skunks, marine mammals and more. There have also been isolated reports of H5N1 detections in goats and in a pig in the United States. There have also been reports of cases in humans, notably following exposure to infected animals.

In B.C., H5N1 has been detected in wild birds, on poultry farms and among small wild mammals, including skunks and foxes. Most cases have been reported during migration season when wild birds carrying the virus are in high numbers in B.C. Since the beginning of October 2024, at least 54 infected poultry premises have been identified in B.C., along with numerous wild birds testing positive.

In B.C. and Canada, there have been no cases reported in dairy cattle and no evidence of avian influenza in samples of milk.

Influenza viruses are adaptable and can change when strains from humans or different animal species mix and exchange genetic information. Avian influenza could become more serious if the virus develops the ability to transmit from person to person, with potential for human-to-human transmission.



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Background:

Back on November 9 it was announced that one person in British Columbia had tested presumptive positive for avian influenza (also known as bird flu).

H5N1 avian influenza in people is caused by the H5 influenza virus that normally only infects animals. Some avian flu has been found in poultry in BC this fall.

The positive test for H5 was performed at the BC Centre for Disease Control’s (BC CDC’s) Public-Health Laboratory in Vancouver and samples were sent to Health Canada’s top lab in Winnipeg for further testing and verification.

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===== RELATED:

First human case of H5N1 avian flu in Canada detected in BC teen (November 9, 2024)