In This State, First Confirmed US Case of Bird Flu in Kids

The child has mild symptoms and is recovering
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Nov 23, 2024 6:30 AM CST
In This State, First Confirmed US Case of Bird Flu in Kids
This colorized electron microscope image shows avian influenza virus particles (yellow), grown in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) epithelial cells (blue).   (CDC/NIAID via AP)

Health officials on Friday confirmed bird flu in a California child—the first reported case in a US minor. The child had mild symptoms, was treated with antiviral medication, and is recovering, the CDC said in announcing the test results, per the AP. State officials have said the child attends day care and lives in Alameda County, which includes Oakland and surrounding communities, but they released no other details. The infection brings the reported number of US bird flu cases this year to 55, including 29 in California, the CDC said.

Most were farmworkers who tested positive with mild symptoms. One exception was an adult in Missouri who didn't work at a farm and had no known contact with an infected animal. It remains a mystery how that person was infected—health officials have said there was no evidence of it spreading between people. A British Columbia teen also was recently hospitalized with bird flu, Canadian officials have said.

H5N1 bird flu has been spreading widely in the US among wild birds, poultry, and a number of other animals over the last few years. It began spreading in US dairy cattle in March. California has become the center of that outbreak, with 402 infected herds detected there since August. That's 65% of the 616 herds confirmed with the virus in 15 states.

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Officials said they were investigating how the child was infected. California health officials previously said in a statement that they were looking into a "possible exposure to wild birds." There's no evidence bird flu spread from the child to other people. People in the child's household reported having similar symptoms, but their test results were negative for bird flu. Health officials noted the child and the household members also tested positive for other common respiratory viruses. (More bird flu stories.)

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