Sunday, December 22, 2024

Fourth US dairy farm worker infected with bird flu virus

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Last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) confirmed another person working on a dairy cattle farm, this time in Colorado, has been infected with the H5N1 bird flu virus. This raises to four the number of confirmed spillover cases from cows to workers since the outbreak was first confirmed in late March, the first in Texas and the next two in Michigan. 

In the most recent case, the worker’s only symptoms were inflammation of his eyes, also described as conjunctivitis or pink eye. He was treated with antivirals and has since recovered. Health officials have not provided the exact date when the person was first diagnosed nor if there was any genetic testing of the virus that infected him. 

Dairy cattle feed at a farm in New Mexico. On Wednesday, July 3, 2024, U.S. health officials said a fourth dairy worker has been infected with bird flu in the outbreak linked to U.S. dairy cows. [AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd]

Nirav Shah, an epidemiologist and the CDC’s principal deputy director, in a call with reporters on the day the CDC confirmed the fourth case, stated bluntly, “We need to stay prepared for the possibility of an expansion of the H5N1 outbreak in humans.” He then recited the oft-used phrase that the risk to the public continues to remain low, a reassurance so perfunctory as to be meaningless. 

Such assurances, in the context of the continued deepening of the bird flu outbreak on cattle and poultry farms, and while testing of farm workers and broader serological surveillance remain essentially non-existent, have no scientific basis. The extent of these infections remains unknown, and their potential evolution into a pandemic pathogen remains a serious existential threat.

One must recall it was a matter of only a few weeks after COVID-19 was first detected spreading across the city of Wuhan, China, in December 2019, before it had begun to spread across the globe. Since H5N1 is far more lethal than COVID, health authorities and government officials cannot be allowed to follow the blueprint followed by the Trump and Biden administrations, when elementary public health precautions were scrapped in favor of exclusive reliance on vaccines.

Nonetheless, HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra wrote, “We have successfully taken lessons during the COVID-19 pandemic and used them to better prepare for future public health crises. As part of that, we continue to develop new vaccines and other tools to help address influenza and bolster our pandemic response capabilities.” 

The US government is securing future stocks of vaccines against bird flu, including from Moderna to the tune of $176 million. This suggests that the health officials regard H5N1 as a serious threat, despite their public complacency.

Given the experience with mRNA technology and the current COVID vaccines, the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) unit of HHS has accelerated the development of a bird flu vaccine that could be used in people. Preliminary work has been underway with promising results. 

Using a portion of the genetic signature of the H5N1 virus, a blueprint that encodes instructions to make a small protein is administered as a vaccine that teaches the immune system to build immunity against the real pathogen. Testing in mice and ferrets has shown they develop high immune titers. Also, vaccinated ferrets were deliberately infected with the bird flu and all of them survived. By comparison, all the animals that were immunologically naïve succumbed to the infection.

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