4th human bird flu case reported in U.S. as Colorado farmworker is infected

2024-07-03T17:26:27.707ZHealth officials say an ongoing bird flu outbreak in daily cattle does not present a serious risk to human health and are not recommending vaccination for any groups of people. (Matthew Ludak for The Washington Post)A dairy worker in Colorado has been infected with bird flu, marking the fourth human case in an ongoing outbreak that started with detection of the disease in cattle this spring.Colorado health officials said the man experienced mild symptoms, reporting only eye inflammation, a condition known as conjunctivitis.The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment said in a statement that the man was given antiviral medication and recovered. He works at a dairy farm in northeast Colorado and had direct exposure to dairy cattle infected with H5N1, a virus that causes bird flu. Health officials provided no additional details, including whether the man was wearing personal protective equipment.Two other dairy workers infected earlier — in Texas in April and in Michigan in May — also reported eye inflammation. A second Michigan worker infected in late May reported having a cough and eye discomfort with watery discharge. That worker was the first to report more extensive respiratory and eye symptoms.The Colorado worker reported his symptoms to state health authorities, who tested him for influenza. Those initial tests were inconclusive. Additional testing by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the presence of bird flu.In 2022, a poultry worker in Colorado tested positive for the same strain of avian influenza. Across the world, cases of human illness have ranged from mild infections to more severe illness, including pneumonia.Federal health and agriculture officials have repeatedly underscored the importance of dairy farm owners ensuring that workers take precautions — such as wearing personal protective equipment — when working with infected cattle. Federal and state officials have made supplies available to dairy farms but have not required their use.Dairy farm workers typically express milk by hand from cow teats before attaching milking equipment. A splash of contaminated milk could get into the eye directly, or the virus could enter when workers touch their eyes with a contaminated hand. Eye infections have been associated with previous human infections of bird flu.Many public health experts have said insufficient testing of cattle is hampering the ability to understand and control the outbreak, which was officially detected in March but may have been in cows since December.A recent Department of Agriculture study of H5N1 in 15 dairy herds and eight poultry flocks in Michigan found three risk factors for local spread, including contaminated equipment or machinery, people who carry the virus on their clothing or boots, and the animals themselves.Federal health officials said this week their assessment of risk has not changed. The threat to the public remains low, and although dairy workers and others in contact with infected animals are at higher risk, U.S. officials are not recommending vaccination for any groups of people.Earlier this week, federal officials announced plans to expand vaccine and testing capacity in case the ongoing bird flu outbreak in dairy cattle causes an increase in human cases, or if the virus changes to become more easily spread or causes more severe disease, or if cases occur with no connection to an infected herd or person.The U.S. government has stockpiled 4.8 million doses of bird flu vaccine, and those shots are expected to be available starting in mid-July. The U.S. government has also awarded $176 million to Moderna to complete development and testing of an mRNA-based vaccine against H5N1.

4th human bird flu case reported in U.S. as Colorado farmworker is infected
2024-07-03T17:26:27.707Z
Health officials say an ongoing bird flu outbreak in daily cattle does not present a serious risk to human health and are not recommending vaccination for any groups of people. (Matthew Ludak for The Washington Post)

A dairy worker in Colorado has been infected with bird flu, marking the fourth human case in an ongoing outbreak that started with detection of the disease in cattle this spring.

Colorado health officials said the man experienced mild symptoms, reporting only eye inflammation, a condition known as conjunctivitis.

The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment said in a statement that the man was given antiviral medication and recovered. He works at a dairy farm in northeast Colorado and had direct exposure to dairy cattle infected with H5N1, a virus that causes bird flu. Health officials provided no additional details, including whether the man was wearing personal protective equipment.

Two other dairy workers infected earlier — in Texas in April and in Michigan in May — also reported eye inflammation. A second Michigan worker infected in late May reported having a cough and eye discomfort with watery discharge. That worker was the first to report more extensive respiratory and eye symptoms.

The Colorado worker reported his symptoms to state health authorities, who tested him for influenza. Those initial tests were inconclusive. Additional testing by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the presence of bird flu.

In 2022, a poultry worker in Colorado tested positive for the same strain of avian influenza. Across the world, cases of human illness have ranged from mild infections to more severe illness, including pneumonia.

Federal health and agriculture officials have repeatedly underscored the importance of dairy farm owners ensuring that workers take precautions — such as wearing personal protective equipment — when working with infected cattle. Federal and state officials have made supplies available to dairy farms but have not required their use.

Dairy farm workers typically express milk by hand from cow teats before attaching milking equipment. A splash of contaminated milk could get into the eye directly, or the virus could enter when workers touch their eyes with a contaminated hand. Eye infections have been associated with previous human infections of bird flu.

Many public health experts have said insufficient testing of cattle is hampering the ability to understand and control the outbreak, which was officially detected in March but may have been in cows since December.

A recent Department of Agriculture study of H5N1 in 15 dairy herds and eight poultry flocks in Michigan found three risk factors for local spread, including contaminated equipment or machinery, people who carry the virus on their clothing or boots, and the animals themselves.

Federal health officials said this week their assessment of risk has not changed. The threat to the public remains low, and although dairy workers and others in contact with infected animals are at higher risk, U.S. officials are not recommending vaccination for any groups of people.

Earlier this week, federal officials announced plans to expand vaccine and testing capacity in case the ongoing bird flu outbreak in dairy cattle causes an increase in human cases, or if the virus changes to become more easily spread or causes more severe disease, or if cases occur with no connection to an infected herd or person.

The U.S. government has stockpiled 4.8 million doses of bird flu vaccine, and those shots are expected to be available starting in mid-July. The U.S. government has also awarded $176 million to Moderna to complete development and testing of an mRNA-based vaccine against H5N1.