H5N1 Bird Flu Update February 2026 CDC Confirms 71 Human Cases Elevated Alert Level Guidelines cover art

H5N1 Bird Flu Update February 2026 CDC Confirms 71 Human Cases Elevated Alert Level Guidelines

H5N1 Bird Flu Update February 2026 CDC Confirms 71 Human Cases Elevated Alert Level Guidelines

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

H5N1 Bird Flu Briefing: Public Health Alert

Good afternoon. This is the Public Health Authority delivering today's H5N1 Bird Flu Briefing: Public Health Alert. Our purpose is to update you on the current situation, outline risks, and provide clear action steps to protect yourself and your community. We speak with facts from the CDC, USDA, and state health reports as of late February 2026.

The current alert level is elevated due to widespread H5N1 in wild birds, ongoing outbreaks in U.S. poultry and dairy cows, and 71 confirmed human cases since 2024, mostly mild among dairy and poultry workers, per CDC surveillance. CDC reports no unusual flu activity in people, with over 31,900 monitored and low public risk, but experts note the virus is out of control in wildlife, driving resurgence via migratory birds, as detailed by Doral Health and Wellness and Johns Hopkins. This matters because while human-to-human spread is absent, spills to mammals like elephant seals in California and livestock signal pandemic potential if unchecked.

Seek medical attention immediately for severe symptoms: high fever over 103F, difficulty breathing, chest pain, confusion, or persistent vomiting. Monitor at home mild signs like eye redness, cough, sore throat, fatigue, or runny nose for 10 days post-exposure; isolate and call your doctor if worsening.

For poultry workers and high-risk settings like dairies: Follow USDA and CDFA protocols. Wear PPE including N95 masks, goggles, gloves; report sick animals; quarantine exposed herds as California has only four dairies under quarantine with enhanced testing. Avoid raw milk; pasteurization kills the virus.

General public guidelines by priority:
1. Avoid sick or dead birds, backyard flocks, or crowded livestock areas.
2. Cook poultry and eggs to 165F; do not eat or drink unpasteurized dairy.
3. Wash hands thoroughly after animal contact; cover coughs.
4. If exposed, monitor symptoms for 10 days and report to health officials.

For more: Visit cdc.gov/bird-flu or who.int for updates. Emergencies: Call 911 or your local health department hotline.

Stay vigilant, not alarmedour surveillance and mitigation are working. 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.

For more http://www.quietplease.ai

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
No reviews yet