Bird flu could be heading north this spring with fewer federal health officials working to stop it
Source: NBC News
April 4, 2025, 2:44 PM EDT
The outbreak of bird flu that has been ravaging farms nationwide had started to slow over the past few weeks but as wild birds migrate north, scientists say the virus may follow. At the same time, the United States will have fewer people leading the national effort to stop avian influenza.
The sweeping cuts this week to the federal Department of Health and Human Services include the Food and Drug Administrations chief medical officer, who was helping to lead the federal governments bird flu response, and senior staff from the FDAs Center for Veterinary Medicine, which linked bird flu cases to raw pet food, leading to several recalls.
We no longer are going to have the same eyes on this virus, said Dr. Meghan Davis, a former dairy veterinarian and associate professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She said active surveillance of and investigation into how the virus spreads are a necessity, but local health officials and veterinarians will no longer have the same support from the federal government.
The ongoing outbreak of bird flu the worst in U.S. history picked up steam through the fall and winter, pushing egg prices to record highs. While outbreaks in both poultry and cattle have fallen, along with the average price of eggs, health experts say that cases could rise again amid the spring migration, which typically peaks in May and June in the continental U.S.
Read more: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/bird-flu-heading-north-spring-fewer-federal-health-officials-working-s-rcna199607
The bird migrations are the big issue with spread. I know last fall I think, they found a Canada goose here that had it and although many of those stay here year round, you do have them and geese in general, migrating. I used to have mature male ruby-throated hummingbirds show up here in my area in Philly around the last week in March (give or take) and the mature females would finally arrive and were active here by May, with breeding underway, with babies out and about by July.