
12 March 2026
H5N1 Bird Flu Update March 2026 71 US Cases CDC Guidelines for Prevention and Treatment
H5N1 Bird Flu Briefing: Public Health Alert
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H5N1 Bird Flu Briefing: Public Health Alert
Good evening, this is the Public Health Authority delivering todays critical update on H5N1 bird flu. The purpose of this briefing is to inform you of the current situation, outline risks, and provide clear action steps to protect yourself and your community. As of March 2026, the CDC reports 71 human cases in the US since 2024, with 41 linked to dairy herds, 24 to poultry farms, and 2 deaths, including the first in Louisiana. There is no known person-to-person spread, and the public health risk remains low per CDC assessments. However, outbreaks persist in wild birds, poultry, dairy cattle, and mammals across states like California, which accounts for 38 cases. This matters because ongoing animal circulation raises the potential for viral adaptation, as noted by experts at Washington University School of Medicine.
Seek medical attention immediately if you experience severe symptoms such as high fever over 101F, difficulty breathing, chest pain, confusion, persistent vomiting, or severe dehydration these signal potential complications requiring antivirals like oseltamivir, which work best when started early, according to Mayo Clinic guidelines. Monitor at home milder signs like cough, sore throat, muscle aches, fatigue, conjunctivitis or pink eye, and mild respiratory issues common in recent US cases per Cleveland Clinic and CDC data. Isolate, rest, hydrate, and contact your doctor if symptoms worsen or last over 48 hours.
For poultry workers, dairy farm staff, and high-risk settings: Follow strict containment protocols. Wear PPE including N95 masks, goggles, gloves, and gowns during animal contact. Report sick birds or cattle immediately to USDA APHIS no treatment exists for infected flocks, leading to culling. Avoid unpasteurized milk cats consuming it from affected cows faced high mortality. Test bulk milk tanks weekly if in pilot states like California or Texas, and quarantine exposed herds.
General public guidelines by priority:
1. Avoid contact with sick or dead wild birds, backyard flocks, or mammals stay at least 10 feet away.
2. Cook poultry, eggs, and meat to 165F internal temperature; do not eat raw milk products.
3. Practice hygiene: Wash hands frequently, cover coughs, and disinfect surfaces.
4. If high-risk exposure, monitor for 10 days and test via flu surveillance systems.
5. Stay vaccinated against seasonal flu to avoid confusion with H5N1.
For more information, visit cdc.gov/bird-flu or who.int. Emergency: Call 911 for severe symptoms or your local health department. A promising nasal spray vaccine from WashU Medicine showed strong protection in animal tests, preventing upper airway infection tune in for updates.
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.
(Word count: 498. Character count: 2897)
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.
Good evening, this is the Public Health Authority delivering todays critical update on H5N1 bird flu. The purpose of this briefing is to inform you of the current situation, outline risks, and provide clear action steps to protect yourself and your community. As of March 2026, the CDC reports 71 human cases in the US since 2024, with 41 linked to dairy herds, 24 to poultry farms, and 2 deaths, including the first in Louisiana. There is no known person-to-person spread, and the public health risk remains low per CDC assessments. However, outbreaks persist in wild birds, poultry, dairy cattle, and mammals across states like California, which accounts for 38 cases. This matters because ongoing animal circulation raises the potential for viral adaptation, as noted by experts at Washington University School of Medicine.
Seek medical attention immediately if you experience severe symptoms such as high fever over 101F, difficulty breathing, chest pain, confusion, persistent vomiting, or severe dehydration these signal potential complications requiring antivirals like oseltamivir, which work best when started early, according to Mayo Clinic guidelines. Monitor at home milder signs like cough, sore throat, muscle aches, fatigue, conjunctivitis or pink eye, and mild respiratory issues common in recent US cases per Cleveland Clinic and CDC data. Isolate, rest, hydrate, and contact your doctor if symptoms worsen or last over 48 hours.
For poultry workers, dairy farm staff, and high-risk settings: Follow strict containment protocols. Wear PPE including N95 masks, goggles, gloves, and gowns during animal contact. Report sick birds or cattle immediately to USDA APHIS no treatment exists for infected flocks, leading to culling. Avoid unpasteurized milk cats consuming it from affected cows faced high mortality. Test bulk milk tanks weekly if in pilot states like California or Texas, and quarantine exposed herds.
General public guidelines by priority:
1. Avoid contact with sick or dead wild birds, backyard flocks, or mammals stay at least 10 feet away.
2. Cook poultry, eggs, and meat to 165F internal temperature; do not eat raw milk products.
3. Practice hygiene: Wash hands frequently, cover coughs, and disinfect surfaces.
4. If high-risk exposure, monitor for 10 days and test via flu surveillance systems.
5. Stay vaccinated against seasonal flu to avoid confusion with H5N1.
For more information, visit cdc.gov/bird-flu or who.int. Emergency: Call 911 for severe symptoms or your local health department. A promising nasal spray vaccine from WashU Medicine showed strong protection in animal tests, preventing upper airway infection tune in for updates.
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.
(Word count: 498. Character count: 2897)
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.