CBC News: Unprecedented scale of outbreaks raises new concerns, scientists warn.
As early as 1997, just a year after H5N1 was first discovered, there were warning signs this form of avian flu was capable of wreaking havoc far beyond birds.
That year, poultry outbreaks in China and Hong Kong were linked to 18 human infections — and a third of those people later died.
In the decades that followed, alarm bells from the scientific community rang louder and louder. H5N1 began infecting dozens more species, from tens of millions of wild and farmed birds, to raccoons and foxes, to seals and sea lions to, most recently, U.S. dairy cattle. The virus eventually caused more than 800 human infections around the world with a stunning death rate — for known cases — of roughly 50 per cent.
“The increasing host range of the virus, [its] potential spread among mammals and between a mammal and a human, its wide geographical spread, and the unprecedented scale of the outbreaks in birds, raise concerns about the pandemic potential” of H5N1, warned a May editorial in leading medical journal The Lancet Infectious Diseases.
Given those factors, an avian flu pandemic may feel not just inevitable, but imminent.