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Record avian flu epidemic forces 48 million birds to be culled

New Food Magazine 2022-10-13
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As a result of the largest avian flu outbreak on record, around 48 million birds have been culled in the UK and EU, the BBC has reported.

Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) is a virus that causes disease in birds. There are two forms of avian influenza, however the high pathogenicity form has greater severity compared to the low pathogenicity (LPAI) form.

The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) has stated that between 11 June and 9 September 2022, 788 HPAI virus detections were reported in 16 EU/EEA countries. Additionally, in the UK, there were 56 detections of the virus in poultry, and 22 and 710 in captive and wild birds respectively.

Infected wild birds pose as an ongoing risk of infection for domestic birds too. Between June and September 2022, the number of outbreaks in domestic birds has declined compared to previous months, although it was more than five times higher compared to the same period the year before, according to the EFSA.

“With cases detected in poultry and wild birds up to September, the current epidemic is clearly still ongoing,” said Guilhem de Seze, Head of the Risk Assessment Production Department at EFSA.

“As autumn migration begins and the number of wild birds wintering in Europe increases, they are likely at higher risk of HPAI infection than previous years due to the observed persistence of the virus in Europe.”

Compared to the 26 recorded cases of HPAI in 2020-2021, the UK has had 161 cases of the disease recorded in poultry and captive birds in 2022. This has led to the culling of 3.2 million birds in the UK alone.

The UK government has labelled the culled birds as a “small” proportion of poultry production which obtains around 20 million birds a week.

In order to ease the spread of the virus, the EFSA has recommended a rapid implementation of suitable and sustainable HPAI mitigation strategies. These include appropriate biosecurity measures and surveillance strategies for early detection.

Additionally, medium to long-term prevention strategies are being encouraged by the EFSA in densely populated areas and in poultry production systems highly susceptible to avian influenza exposure.

“Vigilance is needed to identify infections with influenza viruses as early as possible and to inform risk assessments and public health action,” Andrea Ammon, Director of the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) told the BBC.

Avian influenza was first recorded in geese farms in Southern China’s Guangdong province in 1996. The highly pathogenic form of avian influenza called H5N1 spread through Asia’s poultry units and began infecting different wild bird populations which spread the distribution of the virus across Europe.

Though there have been few reported cases of humans contracting the disease, it is important for those who work with birds to remain protected from exposure. The ECDC has concluded that the risk of infection for the general human population in the EU/EEA is low, and low to medium for occupationally exposed people.

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