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Magadh Today > Latest News > United States > Bird flu: first ever death from rare H5N5 strain is recorded in US
United States

Bird flu: first ever death from rare H5N5 strain is recorded in US

Gulshan Kumar
Last updated: 2025/11/23 at 11:01 PM
By Gulshan Kumar 1 month ago
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A person in the US is believed to be the first human to die from a rare strain of bird flu, but state health officials said on Friday the risk to the public is low.

The person in Washington state, an older adult with underlying health conditions, was being treated for a bird flu strain called H5N5 after becoming seemingly the first known human infected by the strain, according to a statement from the Washington State Department of Health.

The patient had been in hospital with the disease since early November after developing a high fever, confusion and respiratory problems, health officials said earlier.

The person – from Grays Harbor county, about 78 miles (125km) south-west of Seattle – had a backyard flock of domestic poultry that had been exposed to wild birds, health officials said.

“The risk to the public remains low,” the statement from state health officials said. “No other people involved have tested positive for avian influenza.”

Health officials said they would monitor anyone who came in close contact with the patient, but “there is no evidence of transmission of this virus between people”.

Earlier this month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a statement about the infection that said no information would suggest “the risk to public health has increased as a result of this case”.

H5N5 is not believed to be a greater threat to human health than the H5N1 virus behind a wave of 70 reported human infections in the US in 2024 and 2025. Most of those have been mild illnesses in workers on dairy and poultry farms.

The distinction between H5N5 and H5N1 lies in a protein involved in releasing the virus from an infected cell and promoting spread to surrounding cells.

This article was amended on 22 November 2025 after the Associated Press agency corrected its information to remove a reference to the gender of the person who died as that has not been released by health officials.

By AP

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