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Topic - A new pandemic
Posted: 10 Apr 2025 at 8:44am By Dutch Josh 2
https://afludiary.blogspot.com/2025/04/who-sear-epidemiological-update-on-h5n1.html or https://afludiary.blogspot.com/2025/04/who-sear-epidemiological-update-on-h5n1.html ;

It's been just over a week since the flurry of media reports on the death of a toddler in Andhra Pradesh, India from the H5N1 virus (see Apr 2nd's Media Reports Of Fatal H5N1 Case in Child In Andhra Pradesh, India).

While many of these media reports cite `government sources', over the past week I've not been able to find any confirmation published on an official government website.  

The official X/Twitter  account for Health, Medical & Family Welfare Department, Government of Andhra Pradesh is quite active, with scores of updates for the month of April, but with no mention of H5N1. 

Their webpage (https://hmfw.ap.gov.in/) has links for Notifications and News/Media, but none of them appear to work, and their (COVID centric) Facebook page hasn't been updated since Sept 2022.

Similarly, searches of the Government of India Press Information Bureau (in both English & Hindi) turn up no mention of this case, and only two press releases mentioning H5N1 (here, and here) this month.  Several other Indian govt sites were simply unresponsive despite multiple attempts to access them.

Sadly, this game of hide and seek with official data isn't unusual, and it isn't just from India (see From Here To Impunity).  Our ability to track individual spillovers and outbreaks continues to deteriorate as more and more countries decide there is little to gain by releasing detailed information.

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Two days later (Feb 24th) we looked at a preprint on feline infections in Chhindwara with a triple-reassortant H5N1 virus (see Preprint: HPAI A (H5N1) Clade 2.3.2.1a Virus Infection in 2 Domestic Cats, India, 2025).

While I've no doubt we'll eventually get an update on this latest human case from India via the WHO, it is disconcerting how much H5N1 activity there appears to be in India, and how few details we are privy to.

Of course we've heard no updates since the initial announcement of the UK's human H5 infection in January, or on the UK's H5N1 infected Sheep reported more than 2 weeks ago H5N1 reports have slowed markedly here in the United States since January, and many countries remain completely silent on the threat. 

Two weeks ago we looked a scathing report on the delays (months, sometimes even > 1 year) by countries submitting H5N1 sequence data to GISAID (see Nature: Lengthy Delays in H5N1 Genome Submissions to GISAID).

While I have no way to accurately quantify how much we aren't hearing about H5N1, it is a pretty good bet it is substantial. And this silence extends far beyond just H5N1 (see Flying Blind In The Viral Storm).

A reminder that no news doesn't necessarily mean `good news'.

-----------
https://afludiary.blogspot.com/2025/04/switzerland-announces-1st-imported-mpox.html or https://afludiary.blogspot.com/2025/04/switzerland-announces-1st-imported-mpox.html ; While it gets less attention than H5N1, the WHO declaration of a PHEIC (Public Health Emergency of International Concern) remains in place for the Mpox Clade Ib virus, and the number of countries outside of Central Africa seeing imported cases continues to rise. 

Yesterday Switzerland became the latest European country to report an imported case

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On Monday the UK announced their first Mpox Clade Ib case Without Recent Travel or Known Exposure, which - while still only one case - raises concerns over the potential community transmission of this emerging clade of the virus. 
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Although the first PHEIC issued in the summer of 2022 over the international spread of the Clade IIb, Mpox virus was rescinded in 2023 following steep declines in cases (due largely to uptake of the Mpox Vaccine and behavior changes), we continue to see signs of its resurgence. 

Yesterday Vancouver's Coastal Health issued a bulletin warning of increasing numbers of cases in recent months.

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Today you can literally hop on a plane and be in any corner of the world within 24 hours. Millions of airline passengers make international flights each day, and along with their luggage and cell phones, a small percentage will be carrying infectious diseases.

Most viral infections have a 2 to 14 day incubation period, giving an infected traveler a fairly long asymptomatic `window' for travel. 

As we've seen with MERS-CoV, Mpox, H5N1, and Ebola - most of these viral introductions have failed to take root - but the rapid global spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus in early 2020 illustrates how quickly the status quo can change.

Which why we can't afford to ignore these types of outbreaks, no matter where they occur. 

DJ, Spread of all kinds of diseases in lots of animals-further spreading/evolving the disease only means risks increase. 

https://www.thailandmedical.news/news/breaking-long-covid-individuals-found-to-have-a-disruption-in-the-critical-brain-bridge-linking-the-brainstem-and-cerebellum or https://www.thailandmedical.news/news/breaking-long-covid-individuals-found-to-have-a-disruption-in-the-critical-brain-bridge-linking-the-brainstem-and-cerebellum 
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https://www.thailandmedical.news/news/breaking-hidden-spike-cleavage-site-in-covid-19-virus-found-to-supercharge-fusion-and-possibly-boost-infectivity or https://www.thailandmedical.news/news/breaking-hidden-spike-cleavage-site-in-covid-19-virus-found-to-supercharge-fusion-and-possibly-boost-infectivity 

DJ, CoViD is far from over...just "no longer news"...

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