Idaho Department of Health and Welfare
Idaho Department of Health and Welfare  
Avian Influenza
Avian influenza (AI) consists of a group of flu viruses that infect birds, but can occasionally infect people, too. AI occurs naturally in wild birds and while most birds do not get sick, AI spreads easily between birds. Wild birds can carry AI worldwide and transmit it to domestic birds, including poultry. Some viruses cause mild illness in birds, while others cause high rates of illness and death among entire flocks.
People occasionally become infected with AI through exposure to bird respiratory secretions (e.g., saliva) or excretions, or to surfaces contaminated by these secretions or excretions. However, the risk to humans is generally considered low for most strains. Symptoms in humans can range from mild influenza-like symptoms (e.g., fever, cough, sore throat, muscle aches), to more serious symptoms, like pneumonia. Dangerous strains of AI, like the “H5N1 virus” circulating in parts of Asia, Africa, and Europe, rarely cause human illness, but can cause serious illness and high death rates in humans. Fortunately, this strain has not been detected in the United States in either birds or humans.
 
On this page, you will find helpful material and links to information about AI and how you can protect yourself from possible infection.
 
Adapted from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Avian Influenza website.
Pandemic Influenza
A pandemic is a global disease outbreak. A flu pandemic occurs when a new influenza virus emerges for which people have little or no immunity, and for which there is no vaccine. The disease spreads easily person-to-person, causes serious illness, and can sweep across the country and around the world in very short time.
It is difficult to predict when the next influenza pandemic will occur or how severe it will be. Wherever and whenever a pandemic starts, everyone around the world is at risk. Countries might, through measures such as border closures and travel restrictions, delay arrival of the virus, but cannot stop it.
Health professionals are concerned that the continued spread of the “H5N1 virus” across eastern Asia and other countries represents a significant threat to human health. The H5N1 virus has raised concerns about a potential human pandemic because:
·        It causes severe disease
·        It is being spread by migratory birds
·        It can be transmitted from birds to mammals and in some limited circumstances to humans, and
·        Like other influenza viruses, it continues to evolve.
Since 2003, a growing number of human H5N1 cases have been reported in Asia, Europe, and Africa. More than half of the people reported to be infected with the H5N1 virus have died. Most of these cases are all believed to have been caused by exposure to infected poultry. There has been no sustained human-to-human transmission of the disease, but the concern is that the H5N1 virus will evolve into a virus capable of human-to-human transmission.
Preparation and Planning
Is the bird flu the same as a pandemic? How do I protect myself from a pandemic? Answers to FAQs.


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