Triple-digit temperatures, industrial fans and carts used to kill millions of sick chickens with gas may have caused the largest bird flu outbreak among U.S. workers to date, federal health officials said Tuesday.
A commercial egg-laying facility in northeast Colorado now has four workers confirmed infected with bird flu, and another presumed to have contracted the virus, pending test results. The sickened Colorado workers, announced over the weekend, doubled the number of U.S. human cases since agricultural workers began catching bird flu this year, first from dairy cows.
Workers at the poultry farm in Weld County had been in the process of killing 1.8 million chickens, some of which were infected with the dangerous H5N1 influenza, to prevent it from spreading, federal officials said in a briefing with reporters Tuesday.
Their goggles or N95 face masks apparently slipped as industrial fans blew feathers and other infected items through the sweltering barn, exposing them to the virus, said Dr. Nirav Shah, principal deputy director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The workers all suffered some combination of fever, chills, coughing and/or eye infections, Shah said. They were given the anti-viral Tamiflu and none required hospitalization.
The virus’ risk to the general public remains low, Shah said. The workers’ illnesses were relatively mild, he said, and Tamiflu remains effective. Also, the genetic sequence of the virus has not changed substantially since December, as the virus moved from Texas to a dozen other states, including Colorado ‒ and from birds to cows and then, apparently back to chickens, as well as people.
“We’ve not seen severe illness, which is reassuring,” Shah said. “The other thing we look at, in addition to severity is whether the virus is able to transmit from animals to humans and/or from humans to humans with greater ease or with greater efficiency. We haven’t seen changes, particularly on the human-to-human side.”
The unfolding route of transmission
Officials said they don’t know for sure how the H5N1 virus arrived at the Weld County poultry farm. In early July, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis issued a disaster emergency for the outbreak at the facility, the largest flock of chickens affected in the state and among the largest across the U.S.