Richard Webby, a virologist at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital who studies influenza, said it is unlikely that community spread explains the California case. Instead, other animals that could have come into contact with the virus, such as cats, dogs or rodents, might be contributing to its spread.
Experts have worried for months that the longer the virus spreads among humans and animals, the more likely it will mutate and be able to spread easily between humans.
So far this year, 58 people have been confirmed to have bird flu in the United States, according to the CDC; all but one had been exposed to infected poultry or dairy cows.
In the California case, no person-to-person spread of the virus has been detected and the child's family members all tested negative.
Bird flu has been spreading in poultry since 2022, and cases in dairy cows began to crop up in March. The virus was discovered in a pig for the first time last month.
Bird flu infections in people -- nearly all among farmworkers -- have now been confirmed in seven states.
California accounts for the largest share of human bird flu cases in the country, with 32 confirmed infections. Washington has recorded 11 cases, and Colorado 10, CDC data shows.
Earlier this month, Canadian officials announced that a teen in British Columbia had been hospitalized in critical condition with what is believed to be bird flu.
It’s not clear how the teenager picked up the H5N1 virus because the patient is not known to have any contact with infected animals, officials noted. They added that this is the first human case of the virus reported in both the province and Canada.
"The positive test for H5 was performed at the BC Centre for Disease Control’s Public-Health Laboratory," Dr. Bonnie Henry, provincial health officer of British Columbia, said in a statement.
Testing has been performed on about three dozen people who were in contact with the teen, but none show evidence of infection, Henry added.
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