Bird flu has been in the headlines, accompanied by the usual extremes of concern levels. The past few weeks reminded me of Alfred Hitchcock's 1963 movie "The Birds," especially a diner scene where an elderly (my age?) amateur ornithologist (Ethel Griffies as Mrs. Bundy) attempts to explain why the "brain pan" size of a crow or blackbird makes any organized attack on humans impossible. The discussion is interrupted by another customer declaring the end of the world, interspersed with background shouts of orders for blood marys and fried chicken with baked potatoes.
Before we get to bird, a few other items of note.
Dengue Update
Maybe things aren't quite as bad, with a downward trend now apparent in the Americas.
The bulk of this atypical seasonality increase is from the Andean and Southern Cone regions of South America. Brazil by far leads the way, and Argentina, Peru, and Paraguay are in a second tier by numbers of cases. Here's a numbers breakdown for last week and for the calendar year as a whole:
Don't Dismiss Covid
Yes, the current variants and immunity levels in the US seem to result mostly in mild disease and numbers continue to trend downward, but we are seeing well over a thousand deaths per month from covid in the US. It is still a devastating disease.
Measles Still Hanging Around
No outbreaks in new jurisdictions in the US in the past week; Illinois and Florida still account for most of the cases this calendar year.
Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI)
The name itself is pretty ominous, cue those eery bird sounds from the movie. The biggest event last week was the confirmation of a case of influenza A H5N1 infection in a man from Texas, almost certainly acquired from the dairy cows he worked with. He was treated with oseltamivir and apparently is doing well. CDC issued a health advisory through their Health Alert Network last week, including a lot of good advice and helpful links. People who are around birds or dairy animals should take care; this includes those with backyard chicken flocks. The public health messaging has been pretty consistent: no cause for alarm, and certainly no reason to avoid dairy products or eggs at your local store (assuming the dairy products are pasteurized). FDA has a great Q&A page on this.
Note however that we have pockets of these viruses throughout the US, including in wild mammals.
We can be reassured that all of these strains are being tracked and sequenced worldwide through the Global Influenza Surveillance & Response System (GSAID). Scroll down at that link to watch an animation of the geographic spread of influenza A H5Nx viruses worldwide over the past few decades.
We have several antiviral therapies available, and vaccine prototypes are ready to enter mass production if necessary. So far, none of these strains seem well adapted for human-to-human spread, but if that happened it would be a major event that would cause much more concern. I'm also watching to see if this appears in pig populations, since swine flu viruses have been seen in the past to foreshadow human spread. Pigs have similar flu viral receptors to humans, so spread in pigs can be seen prior to a jump to humans. Thankfully, many of the events that facilitate spread among different animal species also are associated with lower virulence, so clinical impact is minimal.
Don't Look Up (Without Your Eclipse Glasses)
Yes, I know it's yet another movie. Just be careful with tomorrow's eclipse.