The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has warned that avian flu viruses “pose pandemic potential” as new analysis suggests one dairy worker’s case could represent the first known instance of transmission of bird flu from animals to humans — marking a significant evolution of the virus.
A CDC technical report says bird flu presents a “low risk to the general public” for now but that viruses have “caused severe respiratory disease in infected humans worldwide” and that it is “likely” dairy workers identified as having symptoms are refusing to be tested, leaving officials with gaps in their knowledge.
One dairy worker known to have contracted bird flu that had previously passed into cattle in Texas “did not disclose the name of their workplace,” hamstringing investigators’ ability to test for further infections.
Why he roadblocked the investigation is unclear, although agri-businesses and meat-packing corporations are known to employ illegal or inadequately vetted immigrants in large numbers.
In a recent report in the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers, including some from the CDC, concluded that there is “strong evidence” that the Texas farm worker contracted the disease from sick cattle, which would mark the first known instance of animal-to-human transmission.
If bird flu transfers from birds to humans, possibly via an intermediate animal, at scale, the impact could be “100 times worse than Covid,” with the virus having a far higher death rate. The chances of such a development are exacerbated by U.S. taxpayer money funding research to make bird flu more virulent in China.