This is Avian Flu Watch: Global H5N1 Tracker.
Today, we’re mapping the latest footprint of H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza. As of mid-November 2025, the World Health Organization and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control confirm 993 human cases globally since 2003, including 476 deaths, with over a dozen cases and several fatalities reported just in the last year. These numbers underscore a stubborn and evolving pandemic threat.
Let’s break down current geographic hotspots. The Americas have seen a surge, especially in the United States, where mathematical modeling from US researchers indicates ongoing outbreaks concentrated along the West Coast, notably in California and Texas, with Arizona and Wisconsin at high risk for imminent spread. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that over 60 human cases have occurred in the US this year, including clusters linked to dairy cattle and raw milk exposure.
In Europe, transmission remains high in southwestern and western regions, with recent outbreaks in Portugal, Spain, Hungary, Iceland, and Poland. Community-level surveillance has also been ramped up in Cambodia after fatal human cases in early and late 2025. Reports from China and India highlight persistent poultry-to-human spillovers, reinforcing Southeast Asia as a key zone of concern.
Looking at comparative statistics, the global case fatality ratio continues to hover near 48 percent. This is a stark reminder that H5N1, while still rare in humans, is often deadly when infection occurs. During October and November, monthly global reports have shown a rising trend line in outbreaks among birds and mammals, especially in countries with intensive poultry and dairy operations.
Visualizing the spread, one would see a heat map glowing along transcontinental migratory bird routes, with streaks tracing wildfowl pathways from Siberia through Europe and into Africa and the Americas. According to Nature, wild birds remain the main dispersal vector between continents, but recent mathematical models show increasing cross-border livestock transmission, especially via trucked cattle in North America.
This cross-border linkage is further amplified by trade and insufficient farm biosecurity. For example, U.S. measures involving random testing of up to 30 cattle per interstate export have slowed, but not halted, the epidemic’s growth. The response in Asia has generally been more aggressive, with periodic bans on poultry movement and culling of exposed animals, though sporadic enforcement gaps do persist.
Notably, new variants of concern are emerging. The clade 2.3.4.4b dominates globally, with studies warning it can cross species barriers in unexpected ways—recent bovine-origin transmissions in the US and Europe have shown evidence of non-traditional infection routes, such as viral contamination of raw milk consumed by other animals. Researchers emphasize heightened vigilance for reassortant strains and continued monitoring of wild and domestic reservoirs.
For those traveling to or from affected regions, the CDC and global health agencies recommend strict avoidance of live poultry markets, consumption of raw or unpasteurized milk, and direct contact with wild birds or sick livestock. Quarantine measures remain in place at points of livestock export, and heightened surveillance is routine in airports servicing hotspot regions.
Thanks for tuning in to Avian Flu Watch. Check back next week for the latest in global H5N1 surveillance and containment insights. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more content, visit Quiet Please Dot A I.
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