Highlights • Concern over H5N1 bird flu testing and detection in the Netherlands is increasing. • 50 human laboratories in the Netherlands, Aruba, Bonaire , and Curacao were assessed. • The laboratories detected animal influenza viruses with high performance. • Few laboratories identified the animal subtype of detected influenza A viruses. • National reference laboratory capacity to identify the animal subtype is critical. Abstract Background Since 2022, highly pathogenic H5N1 influenza A virus clade 2.3.4.4b has caused global outbreaks among wild birds and poultry , with increasing mammalian and sporadic human infections . This elevates concerns about zoonotic transmission and pandemic risk , highlighting the need for accurate detection and identification of animal influenza A viruses by human clinical diagnostic laboratories (hCDL). Methods To evaluate routine diagnostic performance , an External Quality Assessment (EQA) panel containing inactivate...
Heard and McDonald Islands {#Australia} - #Influenza A #H5N1 viruses of high pathogenicity (Inf. with) (non-poultry including wild birds) (2017-) - Immediate notification [FINAL]
By Andrew Shiva / Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=46772024 ___ Samples were taken from dead wild animals during a research voyage to Heard Island, an Australian sub-Antarctic external territory. HPAI was detected from samples taken from two gentoo penguins . This follows initial detections in southern elephant seals on an earlier voyage in October 2025. There was no further evidence of ongoing mass mortality detected during the second voyage in January 2026. Further sequencing and phylogenetic analysis is being undertaken. Source: Link: https://wahis.woah.org/#/in-review/7261 ____