Welcome to Bird Flu Intel: Facts, Not Fear, on H5N1, where we cut through the noise about bird flu and stick to what science actually tells us. I’m your host.
Let’s tackle some of the biggest myths about H5N1 bird flu circulating right now. One widespread misconception is that H5N1 only infects birds and poses no risk to humans or mammals. That’s simply false. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, since 2020, H5N1 outbreaks have affected both wild and domestic birds around the globe, and—recently—there’s been clear evidence of the virus infecting and even killing mammals such as cows, cats, alpacas, and pigs. There have also been more than 70 confirmed human infections in 2025 alone, some fatal, most after contact with infected animals, though no sustained human-to-human spread has been documented.
A second myth claims that if you don’t feel sick, you can’t have or spread H5N1. Wrong again. The CDC and reviews in JAMA Network Open note that asymptomatic infections do occur. This means some people can be infected, show no symptoms, and still test positive, making it harder to detect transmission chains and allowing the virus more opportunities to adapt.
Third, some social media posts have exaggerated the threat, suggesting H5N1 is already causing a pandemic like COVID-19 or that the food and milk supply is unsafe. Here’s what we know: While the U.S. Department of Agriculture has found high viral levels in raw milk from infected cows, no live virus has been detected in pasteurized milk, and food safety agencies worldwide conclude that properly cooked food and pasteurized dairy products remain safe to consume. The current scientific consensus is there is no evidence of H5N1 spreading widely between people or causing a new pandemic at this time.
Why does misinformation spread so fast with diseases like bird flu? It’s partly because fear sells, and rumors posted online or spread through sensational headlines can go viral much more quickly than precise scientific updates. The harm comes when people avoid safe foods, waste resources on unproven remedies, or ignore genuine health advice, undermining public trust and even making outbreaks harder to control.
So, how can you evaluate the quality of information on H5N1?
Ask yourself:
- Does the claim come from respected public health organizations like CDC, WHO, or major university medical centers?
- Are multiple credible sources reporting the same findings?
- Are statements accompanied by clear evidence or peer-reviewed research?
- Is the information up to date, given how quickly things change?
The scientific consensus in 2025 is that H5N1 mostly spreads from infected animals to humans—not person to person—with most human cases linked to direct contact with sick animals or contaminated surfaces. While the overall risk to the public remains low, experts remain alert, especially given the possibility that the virus could mutate, potentially making it more contagious between people. This is one area of legitimate uncertainty scientists are watching closely.
Thanks for tuning in to Bird Flu Intel: Facts, Not Fear, on H5N1. We’ll be back next week with more evidence-based updates on global health. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out Quiet Please Dot A I.
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