H5N1 Avian Flu Scare: ICMR Monitors Outbreak, No Human Cases Yet

The recent culling of over 150,000 chickens in Maharashtra's Navapur has raised concerns about H5N1 avian flu transmission. Dr Rajeev Bahl of ICMR confirmed that NCDC and ICMR are closely monitoring the outbreak, with no human cases reported. Experts note that sustained human-to-human transmission is extremely rare, and India has recorded only two human cases. Dr Ishwar Gilada urged pandemic preparedness and media restraint, emphasizing there is no need for panic.

Key Points: H5N1 Bird Flu: ICMR Monitors Outbreak, No Human Cases

  • Over 150,000 chickens culled after H5N1 outbreak in Maharashtra's Navapur
  • ICMR and NCDC closely monitoring, no human transmission reported
  • Only two human cases recorded in India to date
  • Experts urge pandemic preparedness and media restraint
3 min read

Multidisciplinary teams monitoring H5N1 avain flu scare, no need to panic: DG ICMR

ICMR and NCDC monitor H5N1 avian flu outbreak in Maharashtra after culling over 150,000 chickens. Experts say no need to panic as human transmission remains rare.

"There is no cause for panic. The media must exercise restraint and present scientific developments with balance, context, and factual scrutiny. - Dr Ishwar Gilada"

By Shalini Bhardwaj, New Delhi, May 7

The recent culling of over 150,000 chickens after an outbreak of H5N1 avian influenza or bird flu in Maharashtra's Navapur has once again triggered concerns regarding the possibility of human transmission.

In light of the outbreak, Dr Rajeev Bahl, Director General of the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), asserted that the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) and the ICMR are closely monitoring the spread of H5N1 avian influenza in the state.

"The National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying (DAHD) and Indian Agricultural Research Institute (ICAR) are closely monitoring the H5N1 avain influenza, till now no human transmission cases have been reported," said Dr Bahl.

Human infection with highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 is known to cause severe respiratory illness and carries a high mortality rate, as more than half of the nearly 1,000 reported cases worldwide have proved to be fatal. Experts emphasise that while the virus is lethal, there is currently no specific treatment or vaccine available for human use.

However, despite the global impact, India has recorded only two confirmed human cases to date. Scientists assert that sustained human-to-human transmission of H5N1 remains extremely rare. Hence, this biological limitation has, so far, prevented the virus from evolving into a large-scale human disaster or a global pandemic.

According to Dr Ishwar Gilada, Secretary General of the Public Health Organisation (India), pandemic preparedness must evolve into a broader "emergency preparedness" framework. Dr Gilada asserted that this strategy should encompass both man-made and natural catastrophes, including heatwaves and wildfires, which are currently demonstrating the severe impacts of global warming.

"There is no second thought on pandemic preparedness that is required at the global, national, state and local level all over the world. Pandemic preparedness should even go beyond and become emergency preparedness that encompasses all the man-made and natural catastrophes too, which includes heat waves, wildfires that are currently showing their worst-ever impacts of global warming. Tracking the viruses and other microbes, genome sequencing, knowledge sharing, Research & Development to find vaccines, treatments/cures, prevention guidelines if and when there is an outbreak, are crucial steps that should have continuity," said Dr Gilada.

Addressing the spread of the H5N1 virus, Dr Gilada noted that there is currently no evidence of sustained human-to-human transmission of the virus. Citing WHO data, Dr Gilada mentioned that approximately 939 human cases of H5N1 and 464 deaths have occurred worldwide from 2003 to date.

The PHO Secretary General explained that there is no need for panic over the virus.

"There is no cause for panic. The media must exercise restraint and present scientific developments with balance, context, and factual scrutiny. Any attempts at fear-based narratives or commercial exploitation through exaggerated claims should be critically examined and exposed," added Dr Gilada.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Finally some responsible reporting! The media needs to calm down with the pandemic fear-mongering. Dr. Gilada is right - we went through COVID and learned nothing about how to communicate science without panic. But still, chicken prices are going to skyrocket again! 😅
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Robert F
While I appreciate the calm approach, I'm concerned about the lack of a specific vaccine or treatment for H5N1 in humans. With almost 50% mortality rate in documented cases, shouldn't we be investing more in R&D for this? The global tracking and genome sequencing mentioned are crucial, but we need concrete action, not just monitoring.
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Aman W
As someone who works in poultry supply chain in Maharashtra, I can tell you this outbreak is being taken very seriously at the ground level. The teams from Animal Husbandry are doing a great job with surveillance. But the call for "emergency preparedness" is spot on - we saw how heatwaves killed more people than COVID in some states last year. Let's learn from this!
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Nicole R
I'm glad to see a multidisciplinary approach - NCDC, ICMR, DAHD, ICAR all working together. This is how we should handle similar health threats in the future. The data on 939 cases and 464 deaths globally is sobering, but the fact that India has only had 2 cases shows our surveillance systems are working. We just need to keep it up.

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