every time a person is infected with h5n1 we’re giving the virus the optimal chance to learn how to infect humans efficiently and to transmit between humans efficiently, which is one major barrier to a pandemic right now.
that’s why it’s important that no infection be viewed as acceptable.
we’re in the midst of respiratory viral season now, with rsv, covid and influenza. what’s the worry over co-infection with h5n1?
that an h5n1 virus might recombine with a seasonal flu virus. flu viruses can rapidly pick up entirely new genes. that’s the fast-forward pathway to a pandemic. h5n1 could pick up a gene from a human flu, which is already very transmissible, and then gain the ability to transmit effectively almost overnight.
what people are really worried about are swine or pigs. because pigs are quite readily infected with both avian influenza viruses (they have a lot of exposure to wild birds) and human influenza viruses (exposure to infected humans tending to them). the most recent flu pandemic was the 2009 so-called swine flu pandemic. that pandemic emerged when three different viruses — a human virus, an avian virus and a swine virus — all mixed together.
pigs are a well-known high-risk host for the emergence of pandemics because of their unique ability to be infected very efficiently by both avian and human influenzas.