Avian influenza is devastating poultry operations, spreading in dairy cattle and infecting farm workers. Why isn’t the United ...
New simulations by Indian researchers show how a human outbreak could unfold—and highlight the importance of early detection and calibrated public health responses ...
As support from the U.S. government has evaporated, Moderna is leaning on an old ally to carry plans for its prospective mRNA ...
Although development of a jab for the H5N1 strain of avian flu is well under way, other strains are receiving less attention ...
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Could bird flu become the next pandemic for humans?
Long confined to birds, avian flu is increasingly showing signs it could infect humans. Studies from Cambridge, Glasgow and ...
Bird flu resists fever’s heat; a viral gene enables replication at high temperatures, bypassing immune defences.
A new study has discovered that the H5N1 avian influenza virus has reached wild pig (wild boar) populations in Alberta.
Scientists have warned H5N1 bird flu could make a dangerous leap to humans, triggering a global health crisis.
New research reveals why bird flu poses such an unusual danger to humans: it can keep multiplying even at temperatures that normally shut viruses down.
Following the first human death from the H5N5 strain of bird flu, experts are warning the virus, of which a number of strains ...
If we avert our eyes from the bird flu threat because our systems have grown inattentive, underfunded and unprepared, we risk ...
Multiple new avian influenza outbreaks have been confirmed at poultry farms in the Netherlands despite a nationwide housing ...
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