Experts sound the alarm as Ohio farmworker’s bird flu sparks fear it’s the next pandemic

BYLindsey Leake

February 13, 2025 at 11:00 AM PST

Hens at a poultry farm

Bird flu has now spread to humans in a dozen states after public health officials confirmed on Feb. 12, 2025, that an Ohio man had contracted the disease.

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Bird flu has now spread to humans in a dozen states after public health officials confirmed an Ohio man had contracted the disease.

The Mercer County farmworker had come into contact with deceased commercial poultry, the Ohio Department of Health announced Feb. 12. Prior to this latest case, 68 people in 11 states had been infected with an H5 strain of avian influenza, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). One person in Louisiana who had been exposed to wild birds and a noncommercial backyard flock has died, a loss the CDC called “tragic” but “not unexpected because of the known potential for infection with these viruses to cause severe illness and death.”

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Most human infections in the U.S., 36, have been among people in California exposed to dairy cattle herds. Since March 2024, nearly 1,000 cattle in 16 states have tested positive for bird flu, primarily in California, according to the Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS). And since February 2022, nearly 159 million birds in more than 1,500 commercial and backyard flocks have been infected, with the plurality of flocks in Minnesota.

In the past 30 days, however, Ohio has been a hotspot of poultry infections. The Buckeye State has reported more than 10.3 million sick birds, nearly half of the 24.3 million infections reported nationwide in that time frame. Such numbers were alarming to state leaders even before bird flu had spread to one of their own. U.S. Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-Ohio, brought her concerns to the House floor.

“My state of Ohio is the second-largest egg-producing state in our nation, and nationwide over 14 million egg-laying birds have been killed since December of last year due to the growing bird flu outbreak,” Kaptur said in a congressional recording posted to X on Feb. 7. “That is why the cost of eggs [is] skyrocketing, and this is why we must get this outbreak under control as human infection rates rise.”https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/5ySOh/5/

Should I be worried about bird flu?

Yes and no. People most at risk of contracting the illness are those who work with or are otherwise likely to come into close contact with infected animals. No person-to-person spread has been detected to date, and the CDC maintains that the risk to public health is low. Consuming only pasteurized dairy products and steering clear of raw meat and poultry can help mitigate disease spread.

Still, the rapidly evolving situation calls for vigilance, says Meghan Frost Davis, DVM, PhD, an associate professor in the environmental health and engineering department at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. This is especially true now that in addition to H5N1 bird flu, which has been at the center of the current outbreak, H5N9 has been detected.

“Consumers should be on alert. Public health practitioners should be very concerned,” Davis, who is also a former dairy veterinarian, tells Fortune. “Anytime you get an additional strain of a zoonotic virus that has pandemic potential, [it] should garner caution.”

Influenza viruses are malleable such that different strains can mix and match, so to speak, Davis explains. It’s not out of the realm of possibility that a resulting recombinant bird flu virus could lead to person-to-person spread. Pigs, which can catch both bird and human flu viruses, not to mention swine flu, pose a particular threat.

“We’re always concerned about pigs getting an avian influenza,” Davis says. “That could lead to a new virus that we’ve never seen.”

As fears of mutated avian influenza spiral, H5N1 continues to surprise. In January, APHIS confirmed that an H5N1 variant not previously seen in cows had been detected in dairy cattle in Nevada.

“We have never been closer to a pandemic from this virus,” Rick Bright, an immunologist and former federal health official, previously told Fortune’s Carolyn Barber. “And we still are not doing everything possible to prevent it or reduce the impact if it hits.”

Is there a bird flu vaccine?

No, but it’s in the works. Last month, the Department of Health and Human Services granted Moderna $590 million to help accelerate bird flu vaccine development. In addition, the CDC has already prepared what it calls candidate vaccine viruses for bird flu that other pharmaceutical companies can use to develop immunizations.

In the meantime, the CDC encourages everyone 6 months and older to get their 2024–25 seasonal flu shot. This vaccine won’t protect you from bird flu, but the more people who are vaccinated, the lower the odds that a mutated bird flu virus capable of person-to-person spread will form.

For more on bird flu:

Wolf-gate’ Killing Dogs Trump’s Fish and Wildlife Nominee

Center for Biological Diversity

For Immediate Release, February 12, 2025

Contact:Stephanie Kurose, (202) 849-8395, skurose@biologicaldiversity.org

WASHINGTON— President Trump today nominated Brian Nesvik to be the director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Nesvik, the former director of the Wyoming Game and Fish Department, has an extreme record on wildlife issues.

Nesvik faced major national blowback in 2024 after his agency failed to take strong action against a man who captured a juvenile wolf by running her down with a snowmobile. A published photo showed the man posing with the injured animal, who had her muzzle taped shut. The man, who ultimately killed the wolf, received a $250 fine.

“Trump is declaring war on wolves, grizzly bears and imperiled wildlife across America by picking Nesvik to run the Fish and Wildlife Service,” said Stephanie Kurose, the Center for Biological Diversity’s deputy director of government affairs. “In Wyoming Nesvik led one of the most anti-conservation wildlife agencies in the country, and it’s glaringly obvious that he wants to destroy the Endangered Species Act and with it our best chance of fighting the extinction crisis. You only put a guy like this in charge of protecting endangered animals if you want them wiped out.”

In 2020 Nesvik joined the Wyoming Stock Growers Association in stating that the Endangered Species Act “must be pruned.” The Stock Growers Association is a trade organization that represents the interests of cattle ranchers in Wyoming and has long opposed protections for endangered species, as well as some of the nation’s most prized public lands like Grand Teton National Park.

During the Obama administration, Nesvik supported former Wyoming Governor Mead’s efforts to weaken the Endangered Species Act, which called for weaker protections for all species listed as “threatened,” ignoring climate change’s threats to endangered species, prematurely ending the Act’s protections for wildlife and transferring management to states, and increasing “regulatory flexibility” for extractive industries to harm endangered species.

More recently, Nesvik vocally opposed efforts to protect and conserve sage grouse populations from threats to their habitat from the oil and gas industry, as well as grazing, after the first Trump administration weakened protections for the bird.

“Nesvik’s lackadaisical response to the tormenting of that young Wyoming wolf speaks volumes about his lack of care for wildlife,” Kurose said. “But his larger record truly underscores how deeply he despises the Fish and Wildlife Service’s fundamental mission. Most Americans want our imperiled wildlife protected, but we can’t count on Nesvik to lift a finger to prevent extinction.”

RSYellowstone_wolf_National_Park_Service_Jacob_Frank_Public_Domain_FPWC_2
Yellowstone wolf photo available for media use with appropriate credit. Please credit National Park Service / Jacob W. Frank. Image is available for media use.

The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1.7 million members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.

Deer in Carbon County tests positive for fatal neurological disease, Pa. Game Commission says

Pa. Game Commission

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PACKER TWP., Pa. – The Pennsylvania Game Commission said Wednesday a deer in Carbon County tested positive for a fatal neurological disease.

The deer, an adult male, was detected in Packer Township, according to a news release from the commission. The detection of Chronic Wasting Disease is the first in Carbon County and is more than 10 miles from any other confirmed CWD-positive deer, the game commission said.

The game commission says the deer was found dead by a landowner and was severely emaciated.

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An always-fatal neurological disease caused by a misfolded protein called a prion, CWD is a threat to deer and elk, according to the news release. It’s classified as a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy and is similar to scrapie in sheep, mad cow disease in cattle and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans. the game commission said.

The game commission says CWD spreads through direct animal-to-animal contact, as well as indirectly through prion-contaminated environments. CWD-infected deer shed prions through saliva, urine and feces, and infected carcasses contribute to environmental contamination, according to the news release.

Once in soil, the game commission says CWD prions remain infectious for decades. Therefore, feeding deer is strongly discouraged and is illegal within existing DMAs, according to the game commission.

There is no evidence of CWD infecting humans or other species under natural conditions, according to the game commission’s news release. However, much is still unknown about CWD, therefore the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends not eating the meat of a CWD-positive deer.

The commission says it will host an informational meeting to answer any questions from the public. It is scheduled for Thursday, Feb. 27, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Penn State Hazleton, Graham Building Room 115, Parking Lot F. Penn State Hazleton Campus address is 76 University Drive, Hazleton PA 18202.

Contact the Game Commission’s CWD Hotline at 1-833-INFOCWD, email INFOCWD@pa.gov or visit http://www.arcg.is/1G4TLr for more information.