arstechnica ,
@arstechnica@mastodon.social avatar

We still don’t understand how one human apparently got bird flu from a cow

A genetic analysis and case report reveal new insights and big gaps in our knowledge.

https://arstechnica.com/science/2024/05/we-still-dont-understand-how-one-human-apparently-got-bird-flu-from-a-cow/?utm_brand=arstechnica&utm_social-type=owned&utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social

FerdiMagellan ,
@FerdiMagellan@aus.social avatar

@arstechnica

Q. How did the chicken cross the road?
A. It flu.

“The genetic data is clear that once this strain of bird flu—H5N1 clade 2.3.4.4 genotype B3.13 —hopped into cattle, it could readily spread to other mammals. The genetic data links viruses from cattle moving many times into other animals: There were five cattle-to-poultry jumps, one cattle-to-raccoon transmission, two events where the virus moved from cattle to domestic cats, and three times when the virus from cattle spilled back into wild birds.”

number6 ,
@number6@fosstodon.org avatar

@arstechnica

Rather than the rare cow-to-human jump, shouldn't they be looking at the more common cow-to-cow jump?

Maybe if the cows weren't being housed in factory farm conditions the virus would stop being able to spread.

RealGene ,
@RealGene@hachyderm.io avatar

@arstechnica
The usual way on a farm, by fucking it?

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