Opinion: Bird flu is coming for humans. We can either get ready or court disaster
LA TimesBird flu has seen a resurgence in the U.S. this year, with California leading the pack. Since 2022, millions of egg-laying chickens have been exposed to, infected with and culled or killed by H5N1 in the U.S. What stands out this year is how widespread the infection has been among dairy cows, which are spreading it to farmworkers — the group that accounts for most of the human cases so far. A research paper this month reported that H5N1 is now just one mutation away from attaching more easily to human cells, possibly enabling sustained human-to-human transmission — which could mean more people getting infected and becoming seriously ill, disrupting school, work and our everyday lives. A teenager in Canada’s British Columbia with a mutated form of H5N1 became critically ill; such mutations could lead to more streamlined entry into human airways, making people sicker. The other option is to go the direction the incoming federal government seems poised to support: Shrink public health dollars and expertise at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other federal entities, cut investments in infectious disease research, stymie the use of evidence-based vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostic tests, and support drinking raw milk.