New bird flu variant found in Nevada dairy cows has experts sounding alarms: ‘We have never been closer to a pandemic from this virus'
On Friday came a second and potentially more serious blow: A technical brief by the U.S. Department of Agriculture reported that the genotype, known as D1.1, contains a genetic mutation that may help the virus more easily copy itself in mammals—including humans.
This D1.1 version of the virus is the same variant that killed a man in Louisiana and left a Canadian teen hospitalized in critical condition. It is not the B3.13 genotype widely found in sick cattle dating to early last year.
'This can be of significant concern if this virus continues to spread among cows and infects more people,' immunologist and former federal health official Rick Bright tells Fortune. 'This mutation has not been associated with improved human transmission, so there are no telling signs of enhanced spread yet. But when this virus gets into people, it is ready to cause a much more serious disease than the (B3.13) virus that has been circulating in cows before now.
'We have never been closer to a pandemic from this virus,' Bright adds. 'And we still are not doing everything possible to prevent it or reduce the impact if it hits.'
The D1.1 genotype has been detected in wild birds in all North American flyways, as well as mammals and poultry, so it isn't surprising that it's made the leap to cows. But its newfound presence in the Nevada dairy herds is considered by many virologists to mark a sort of inflection point in the spread of H5N1, and it could spell more trouble for humans going forward.
'Given the fact that D1.1 seems to be more virulent in humans, this could indicate a major change in terms of public health risks from the earlier scenario with the B3.13 strain,' veterinary science pioneer Juergen Richt, a former director at the National Institutes of Health, tells Fortune.
In response to an emailed series of questions, a spokesperson for the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said the agency still deems the risk to human health for the general public to be low. 'However, people with close, prolonged, or unprotected exposures to infected birds or other animals (including livestock), or to environments contaminated by infected birds or other animals, are at greater risk of infection,' the spokesperson said.
The USDA on Friday noted that although the Nevada cattle did not display clinical signs of infection prior to its detection via testing, such signs have since been reported, along with die-offs of a large number of wild birds near the affected dairies.
Should humans be taking more precautions? What is the scope of the risk? And are there mitigating actions that should already be in place on America's farms and dairies?
The urgency of those questions suggests that in the coming weeks, an absolute premium should be placed upon the timely dissemination of information and testing updates from the federal sources upon which researchers and health officials often rely. But that information flow is no longer to be taken for granted.
On Jan. 21, under orders from the Trump administration, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) placed a freeze on almost all external communications, including documents and health guidance, until a Trump-appointed official could be installed and approve them. Such a move is not unprecedented, but when the information freeze blew past its Feb. 1 deadline without being fully lifted, Democratic leaders began crying foul.
One important casualty of that action was the CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. The MMWR, as it's known, is a critical source of information on public health issues. The MMWR failed to publish for the first time in more than sixty years on January 23rd and again on January 30th. Publication did resume on February 6th, but there was no mention of bird flu nor any information about the three H5N1 studies which were scheduled to be published in January according to the Washington Post.
Further, per the Wall Street Journal, the Trump administration is reportedly planning to eliminate the jobs of thousands of U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) employees. Senior public-health officials are reportedly being told to rank employees based on how critical their roles are.
Depending upon where those cuts land across the various agencies of the department, practices like tracing bird-flu outbreaks and approving new drugs could be affected. And Trump's nominee to run HHS, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., in 2023 said he'd tell federal health scientists, 'Thank you for your public service. We're going to give [studying] infectious diseases a break for about eight years.'
These developments have ramped up the concern of scientists and researchers tracking the spread of H5N1, which, according to the CDC, has now infected 959 dairy herds in the U.S. and been responsible for the death of 156 million poultry, sending the price of eggs to record highs because of scarce supply.
Researchers are also loudly asking whether dairy workers should be vaccinated using existing supplies from the federal stock of bird flu vaccine, and whether personal protective equipment should become mandatory on dairy farms and egg-laying facilities for frontline workers.
This all comes back to the timely flow of information and communication—and, experts say, it is being throttled at a critical moment.
'This is chilling but not at all surprising, given the gag put on scientists and the manipulation of scientific communication in 2020 at the start of the COVID pandemic,' says Bright, a vaccine researcher who filed a whistleblower complaint against the Trump administration in 2020 and has been urging health officials for months to ramp up testing and precautions around bird flu.
'When it happened in 2020,' Bright says, 'it slowed the response, sowed distrust in science and public health, and as a consequence many more people died during that time. It is horrifying that lessons were not learned, and we find ourselves in the same or worse situation–not only on H5N1, but on numerous ongoing outbreaks in the U.S.'
A Nevada official tells Fortune that the new cases of D1.1 in cows were traced to dairy farms in Churchill County, with six herds placed under quarantine. Previously, the state's agriculture director, J.J. Goicoechea, told Reuters, 'We obviously aren't doing everything we can and everything we should, or the virus wouldn't be getting in.' Goicoechea said Nevada farmers needed to follow 'good animal health safety practices and bolster biosecurity measures' for their animals.
Where does this all leave humans? According to University of Saskatchewan virologist Angela Rasmussen, the development in Nevada doesn't directly increase the likelihood of human-to-human transmission, but rather 'increases risk of zoonotic human cases—that is, from cows to farmworkers. Beyond that, it is D1.1's ability to mutate (perhaps in ways B3.13 has not mutated) that concerns researchers. That adaptability may allow the virus to more easily spread from person to person.
'This new genotype of H5N1 virus, D1.1 was associated with more severe illness and death in the few known human infections,' Bright says. 'It (the Nevada case) is a significant event, because we now know how easily H5N1 viruses can spread among dairy cows, from farm to farm, jump from milk to other mammals, including mice and cats, and even infect people.'
Federal health agencies have taken 'some positive steps' in recent months to increase testing via a National Milk Testing Strategy, and of testing and subtyping influenza in people, says James Lawler, director of the University of Nebraska's Global Center for Health Security.
'To better control risk, however, we should aggressively ramp up testing and isolation of affected dairy herds and animals, facilitate more widespread surveillance and testing in people, and accelerate vaccine development and production,' Lawler says. Clinicians also need to know that the virus is circulating, Bright says, and to 'test for influenza, not guess.'
Scott Hensley, a viral immunologist at the University of Pennsylvania, agrees. 'We need to closely monitor D1.1 viruses because they have already shown the ability to adapt and cause severe disease in humans,' Hensley says. 'Our H5N1 vaccine stocks are well matched to the D1.1 viruses and would likely provide high levels of protection—we need to ramp up H5N1 vaccine production in case these viruses evolve to spread from human to human.'
In the meantime, Richt says, people need to avoid drinking raw milk, which might contain live virus from infected dairy cows, wash their hands often and report influenza-like illnesses, presumably so that tests can be run. States may follow the lead of California, where the governor declared a bird flu emergency and health officials have facilitated the distribution of millions of pieces of personal protective equipment to farmworkers.
Every effort to contain the virus, though, ultimately will depend to a tremendous extent on the distribution of accurate and timely information—and a government and health community that commits to fighting bird flu and its concerning strains.
'There is a lot that we do not know about D1.1. viruses, and we will all be working overtime to learn more in the coming days and weeks,' Hensley says. It is the mass sharing of what experts learn that will be most critical in the fight.
More on bird flu:
Bird flu could merge with seasonal flu to make mutated virus that could spread among humans, CDC warns
Can you get bird flu from eating eggs? Milk? Poultry? What to know about staying safe
New York City is shutting down all its live bird markets after discovering 7 cases of avian flu
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
8 hours ago
- Boston Globe
What to know about the earthquake that shook the New York area Saturday night
There were no initial reports of serious injuries or significant damage in New Jersey or across the Hudson River in New York City. City officials said that as of late Sunday morning they had not been called to respond to any building-related issues. The Big Apple has more than 1 million buildings. Many posts on social media reported the ground rumbling, and the U.S. Geological Survey reported more than 10,000 responses to its 'Did You Feel It?' website. Advertisement Though people in the United States might associate earthquakes more often with the West Coast, scientists say these types of incidents on the East Coast are not unlikely. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up How frequent are earthquakes in the New York area? The area feels an earthquake about once every couple of years. 'The northeast part of the United States does not see large earthquakes very often,' said Jessica Turner, a geophysicist with the National Earthquake Information Center, which is a part of the USGS. Since 1950, only 43 other quakes of this magnitude and larger have occurred within 155 miles (250 kilometers) of Saturday's event, according to the USGS. A much larger, 4.8-magnitude quake that struck in Tewksbury, New Jersey, a little farther west of the city, in April 2024 was felt as far away as Boston and Baltimore. Some flights were diverted or delayed after that quake, and Amtrak slowed trains throughout the busy Northeast corridor. Advertisement A smaller, 1.7 magnitude earthquake that hit the Astoria section of Queens, New York, in January 2024 stirred residents. The region sees a more damaging one only a couple times a century, if that. New York was damaged in 1737 and 1884 by earthquakes, according to USGS data. How do East Coast earthquakes compare with West Coast ones? The difference between East Coast and West Coast quakes lies in the 'mechanism,' said seismologist Lucy Jones. California is at the edge of the San Andreas fault system, which has two tectonic plates: the Pacific Ocean plate and the North American plate. Two plates move and push to build up stress, meaning earthquakes happen relatively frequently. New York falls in the middle of a plate, far from the nearest boundaries in the center of the Atlantic Ocean and in the Caribbean Sea — resulting in residual stresses and making it difficult to predict where earthquakes will occur. The area is also home to the well-known Ramapo Fault line. Geologists have not seen evidence that would suggest it has had a large earthquake in some time, but there have been smaller ones. Saturday's quake cannot necessarily be associated with this fault, experts say. The same size earthquake is felt over a much larger area in New York than it would be in California. 'The rocks on the East Coast are particularly cold and hard and therefore, do a better job of transmitting the energy,' said Jones. In California, the various faults are more akin to a broken bell, which doesn't transmit energy as well. Does this signal more to come? Every earthquake makes another one more likely, but within a range, scientists say. Advertisement 'At just 3.0, the chances are there will not be another felt event,' Jones said, estimating about a 50-50 chance there will be no activity that can be recorded. 'Most likely is an unfelt, magnitude 1 or 2 aftershock.' Associated Press writers Julie Walker in New York City and Michael Hill in Altamont, New York, contributed.


Newsweek
12 hours ago
- Newsweek
Over a Million Americans Told to Combine Errands as Alert Hits 9 States
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Air quality alerts had been issued for nine states as of Sunday morning, with residents in some areas advised to combine errands in order to help reduce pollution levels. Why It Matters According to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), studies have linked particle pollution exposure to various health effects, including respiratory symptoms—such as coughing and wheezing, the development of asthma and increased susceptibility to respiratory infections. What To Know In collaboration with local agencies, the National Weather Service (NWS) had published air quality alerts for the following states as of Sunday: Minnesota Wisconsin Michigan Illinois Indiana New York Vermont Maine New Hampshire These were issued due to potentially hazardous levels of fine particulate pollution triggered by wildfire smoke flowing into the U.S. from neighboring Canada. In Indiana, advisories affecting over a million residents across numerous counties, including but not limited to Lake, Porter, and Elkheart, advised locals to take steps to help reduce pollution such as avoiding the use of drive-thru lanes and combining errands into one trip. Authorities also suggested limiting vehicle use by walking, biking, or using public transportation if possible. Air quality alerts had been in effect for parts of the U.S. for multiple days due to Canadian wildfire smoke. In a social media post on Friday, AccuWeather reported that the smoke resulted in Chicago having "the worst air quality in the world for several hours and blanketing the skyline in haze" What People Are Saying AccuWeather meteorologist Dan Pydynowski told Newsweek on Friday: "Smoke and haze creating poor air quality at times will likely continue to be an issue in [the Great Lakes, Upper Midwest and central U.S.] through the weekend and into early next week. "The smoke/haze will gradually spread south and east later this weekend into early next week as well, perhaps getting into parts of the Northeast U.S. and the central-southern Plains too." NWS Burlington, Vermont, said on X, formerly Twitter, Saturday: "If you've noticed it becoming hazier this afternoon, you're not mistaken. Canadian wildfire smoke is again entering the region and it is expected to linger for a couple days. Air Quality Alerts have been issued area-wide for tomorrow." The National Weather Service said in a post on X, Friday: "The view from our GOES East satellite at sunrise revealed widespread wildfire smoke that is resulting in large areas of unhealthy air quality, and Air Quality Alerts for at least portions of eight U.S. states. Take precautions." What Happens Next The NWS issues updates regularly on its website.

Epoch Times
a day ago
- Epoch Times
Smoke From Canadian Wildfires Brings Unhealthy Air to Large Swaths of the Midwest
Smoke from Canadian wildfires hovered over several Midwestern states Saturday, bringing warnings of unhealthy air for at least the third day. Air quality alerts were in effect in Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan, as well as eastern Nebraska and parts of Indiana and Illinois. Forecasters said the smoky skies would remain for much of the day. People with lung disease, heart disease, children, older adults and pregnant women are most susceptible to the poor breathing conditions.