Home » As avian flu spreads around the world, experts say ‘we’re nowhere near prepared’ for a future pandemic

As avian flu spreads around the world, experts say ‘we’re nowhere near prepared’ for a future pandemic

As avian flu spreads around the world, experts say ‘we’re nowhere near prepared’ for a future pandemic

When Victorian health officials confirmed Australia’s first human case of avian influenza last week, there were a few key details that struck some of those listening as odd.

The announcement came on the same day that the state’s agriculture department reported an outbreak of bird flu at a poultry farm near Meredith. But the Department of Health made clear that the two incidents were totally unrelated.

In fact, the human case, a two-year-old who had recently returned from India, had been detected in early March. One of Australia’s leading epidemiologists, Professor Raina MacIntyre, noted the almost three-month delay in reporting the case was “not ideal”.

The source of the human infection was also somewhat mysterious. Health officials confirmed the child had picked up the highly pathogenic virus while travelling in India, but did not note any close contact with sick animals or other infected humans.

Two further outbreaks on Australian poultry farms followed, prompting hundreds of thousands of chickens to be culled, while deadly strains of bird flu continued to wreak havoc on the US dairy industry and wild animal populations around the world.

There is an unsettling, familiar tone to all of this news, and a quiet hum of concern runs beneath it — could avian influenza erupt into the next pandemic?

Some of the world’s foremost experts in infectious disease and public health governance say while it is not time to panic, there is a reasonable risk that we must be prepared for. 

“What we worry about is those avian viruses mutating to pick up an adaptation to the human respiratory tract. That’s how a human pandemic would emerge,” Professor MacIntyre said.

These experts share a concern that the fatigue and divisiveness wrought out by the COVID-19 pandemic present significant challenges in tackling new outbreaks head on — already they are hampering efforts to test, report and contain the outbreak in the US. 

They also believe we’re closer to another pandemic than many people realise — but we have “a golden opportunity” to prepare now and get it right.

What’s going on with bird flu in Australia?

First, it’s helpful to understand how different outbreaks of bird flu are categorised. 

Avian influenza is an infectious disease that spreads predominantly among wild birds and poultry. Just like human influenza, there are several types of avian influenza viruses — these are classed broadly as either high pathogenic or low pathogenic, indicating how sick they make infected birds.