
Bird Flu SOS: Urgent H5N1 News & Safety [Host, urgent but steady voice] Welcome to Bird Flu SOS: Urgent H5N1 News & Safety. I'm your host, and today we have a critical update: On January 6, 2025, the Louisiana Department of Health confirmed the first bird flu-related human death in the United States, a man over 65 exposed to infected backyard chickens and wild birds, as reported by Wikipedia's 2020-2026 H5N1 outbreak page. This marks a severe escalation in the ongoing global outbreak now in its sixth year, with H5N1 clade 2.3.4.4b rampant in wild birds, poultry, dairy cows across 19 U.S. states, and mammals worldwide. Experts are sounding alarms. The CDC states A(H5) bird flu is widespread in wild birds, causing outbreaks in U.S. dairy cows with sporadic human cases, per their situation summary. Dr. Ali Rasmussen warns that as the virus mutates, like the first U.S. H5N5 human case in November 2025, human-to-human transmission could spark a pandemic potentially worse than COVID-19, according to the Los Angeles Times. Scientists at the University of Nebraska declare, "It's completely out of control," with the virus hitting unprecedented species from Antarctic penguins to Florida dolphins and U.S. goats, as detailed in outbreak records. The WHO notes over 30,100 people monitored and 1,260 tested since March 2024 after animal exposure. If you're in affected areas like California with 38 of 71 U.S. human cases mostly among dairy workers, or states with infected herds like Texas, Michigan, and Ohio, take these immediate steps: Avoid contact with sick or dead birds, wild animals, or unpasteurized milk. Farm and dairy workers, wear PPE including eye protection, gloves, and masks when handling livestock. Cook poultry and eggs to 165°F. Do not drink raw milk, as the virus persists in it and killed cats that consumed it from infected cows. Report sick birds or livestock to local agriculture departments immediately. CDC emphasizes pasteurization kills the virus, so grocery milk is safe. Warning signs demanding emergency response: Sudden fever, cough, shortness of breath, conjunctivitis, or pneumonia-like symptoms after animal exposure. Seek medical care right away if these appear, especially if you have underlying conditions. For emergency assistance, contact your local health department, call 911 for severe symptoms, or visit CDC.gov/bird-flu for surveillance updates and reporting. In high-risk areas, free testing is available for exposed workers. This outbreak, entering its fourth U.S. year per Farm and Dairy, shows cow-to-cow spread via milking equipment and mutations raising pandemic risks, but no sustained human transmission yet. Stay vigilant, not panicked, to protect yourself and communities. Thank you for tuning in. Come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production. For me, check out Quiet Please Dot A I. [End with somber music fade] (Word count: 498. Character count: 2897) For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the be This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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