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Record Wild-Bird Outbreaks Drive Early, Strong Bird Flu Wave Across Europe

EU health and food safety agencies rate human risk as low, calling for tighter surveillance.

Test tubes are seen labelled "Bird Flu" words in this illustration taken, June 10, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

Overview

  • ECDC tallied 2,896 A(H5) detections from September 6 to November 28 across 29 European countries, with 2,454 in wild birds and 442 in domestic flocks.
  • The early surge is linked to extensive wild-bird circulation, with mass deaths among waterfowl and common cranes along German, French and Spanish flyways, and a slight rise in detections in foxes and domestic cats.
  • Most poultry outbreaks are attributed to primary wild-to-farm introductions rather than farm-to-farm spread.
  • Turkeys are disproportionately affected, and outbreaks have also been reported in vaccinated ducks.
  • Human cases remain rare — 19 reported with two deaths in four countries — with no human-to-human transmission and a low risk for the EU/EEA public; EFSA expects detections to continue rising.