Sunday, June 07, 2026

USDA & Texas Announce 2nd New World Screwworm Detection

 
Credit USDA

#19,192

Three days ago we saw the USDA Confirm the Presence of New World Screwworm (NWS) in the United States (Texas) for the first time since the 1960s.  The NWS is a parasitic fly that lays its eggs in the open wounds of warm-blooded animals (often cattle and deer, but occasionally humans and pets).

Unlike most fly maggots, NWS larva consume and burrow into living tissue, causing substantial morbidity and mortality. (See ASM 2025 Review New World Screwworm: Rise, Fall and Resurgence).

Not unexpectedly, this weekend we are learning of a 2nd case, found in a calf a little more than 5 miles away from the first case. 

Although the risk to public health is extremely low, this agricultural pest can be devastating for the cattle industry. 

The Texas Governor's office has officially declared two counties ( Zavala & Uvalde) as disaster areas, and has committed the full resources of the state to combat the threat. 

Governor Abbott Deploys State Resources To Combat New World Screwworm

June 5, 2026 | Austin, Texas | Press Release

Issues Disaster Declaration for Zavala and Uvalde Counties

Governor Greg Abbott today received a briefing and updated Texans on the state’s response following confirmation of a New World Screwworm (NWS) detection in Texas. The Governor also issued a disaster declaration for Zavala and Uvalde Counties.

“I am issuing an updated statewide disaster declaration to make two things very clear,” said Governor Abbott. “First, I authorize the use of all available resources of state government to respond to this disaster and reassign resources from across the state as needed to address NWS. Second, I am making all state personnel available to accelerate the movement of sterile flies into Texas and the construction of the new sterile screwworm production facility in Edinburg. We have eradicated this pest before, and we will do it again.”

        (Continue . . . )

Excerpts from the USDA's announcement follow:

Animal Health Officials Respond to Second Detection of New World Screwworm in the United States

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: screwworm@usda.gov

WASHINGTON, D.C., June 5, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has confirmed a second detection of New World screwworm (NWS) after testing a number of suspect cases. The confirmed case was found in a one-month-old calf in Zavala County, Texas, approximately 5.6 miles away from the first confirmed detection. APHIS and our Texas partners continue to collect and test other samples from the surrounding area which have come back negative.

NWS is a serious pest that threatens livestock, pets, wildlife, and, in rare cases, people. The larvae burrow into the living tissue of animals, causing severe wounds, animal suffering, and significant economic losses.

“USDA has responded expediently with respect to this second detection, demonstrating our utmost preparedness. This second detection is within the established movement control zone and enhanced sterile insect dispersal area.” said Dudley Hoskins, Under Secretary for Marketing and Regulatory Programs. “Many models projected this pest would reach the United States last year, but thanks to USDA’s phenomenal work and our cooperation with state, federal, and industry partners, we’ve held it off until now—when we are far more prepared to respond. USDA has not wasted any time in this fight, we have defeated New World screwworm before, and we will do it again."

USDA Strike Team and Rapid Deployment Capacity

An APHIS strike team is already on-site in Texas. This team includes veterinary medical officers and animal health technicians – experienced experts who serve as USDA’s boots on the ground response force. APHIS is fully positioned to surge additional trained personnel as needed.

The National Veterinary Services Laboratories (NVSL) has deployed an entomologist to the USDA Agricultural Research Service laboratory in Kerrville, Texas, to expedite confirmation processes by positioning NVSL diagnostic assets in the area.

APHIS has also deployed two dedicated NWS response cargo trailers. Each 24-foot trailer serves as a mobile preparedness and field operations center. Once unloaded, the trailers convert into operational and laboratory space, providing USDA personnel with the equipment and environment necessary to mount a rapid, efficient response.

Treatment Resources and Supplies


The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has issued emergency use authorizations for several NWS treatments for different species. Currently, there are treatments available to support cattle, horses, swine, goats, captive exotic animals, and wildlife.

The National Veterinary Stockpile is actively procuring additional tools to treat and prevent NWS. USDA is working with federal and regulatory partners, and within federal purchasing processes, to secure more treatment options that are flexible, safe, and effective.

The National Veterinary Stockpile has relocated NWS treatment supplies to Texas to better support affected producers in the infested zone. If you or anyone you know needs access to these treatment supplies, they are now available and can be obtained by reaching out directly to the Texas Animal Health Commission (TAHC).

Intensified Sterile Fly Operations

As part of the established NWS eradication strategy, USDA began releasing sterile flies over the area on June 4. These missions will disperse 2 million sterile screwworms twice a week to disrupt the pest’s lifecycle.

In addition to aerial releases, USDA is shipping another 4 million sterile flies per week to Texas. These will be deployed using 24 ground release chambers, strategically placed in and around the detection zone to maximize impact.




WHO Influenza at the human-animal interface (May 8th): 10 Novel Flu Detections In Humans


#19,191

The WHO has released an update (dated May 8th, but only recently posted) of 10 human infections with novel flu reported between April 1st and May 8th, which includes:

  • 3 - A(H5N1) cases (3 Cambodia, 1 Bangladesh, & India)
  • 1 - A(H5N6) case reported by China
  • 5 - A(H9N2) cases  reported by China
  • 1 - A(H1N2)v case reported by the United States

Of note, today's report brings the total number of lab-confirmed of human H5N1 cases since 2003 to 1000 (with 47.9% fatal).  The actual number of cases is believed much higher.

While some of today's case reports provide more detail than others, it appears that at least 3 of the 4 H5Nx cases in this update experienced delays in diagnosis. 
  1. The child in Bangladesh was hospitalized on March 29th - diagnosed with measles with bronchopneumonia - but only tested positive for H5N1 3 weeks later (Apr 20th). 
  2. The fatal H5N1 case in Cambodia was hospitalized on April 16th, but was only confirmed H5 positive on April 21st (died on the 22nd).
  3. The child from West Bengal, India was admitted to the hospital for fever and cough on 19 March and discharged on 23 March. While no exact testing date is provided, India notified WHO on March 27th.
As we've discussed previously (see here, here, here, and here), it takes a certain amount of luck for novel flu infections to be detected, properly treated, and then reported to the relevant health authorities.  

Patients may present with mild or atypical symptoms, and sample collecting and laboratory testing are not always 100% reliable. Some will never be tested, and many cases will undoubtedly go unreported.

I've reproduced the summary, and some excerpts on individual cases, below. I'll have a bit more after the break.

Influenza at the human-animal interface

Summary and risk assessment, from 1 April to 8 May 20261

New human cases2: From 1 April to 8 May 2026, based on reporting date, detections of influenza A(H5N1) in three humans, influenza A(H5N6) in one human, influenza A(H9N2) in five humans, and influenza A(H1N2) variant ((H1N2)v) virus in one human were reported officially

.• Circulation of influenza viruses with zoonotic potential in animals: High pathogenicity avian influenza (HPAI) events in poultry and non-poultry animal species continue to be reported to the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH).3 The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) also provides a global update on avian influenza viruses with pandemi cpotential.4 Additionally, low pathogenicity avian influenza viruses as well as swine influenza viruses continue to circulate in animal populations.

Risk assessment5:  Sustained human to human transmission has not been reported associated with the above-mentioned human infection events. Based on information available at the time of this risk assessment update, the overall public health risk from currently known influenza A viruses detected at the human-animal interface has not changed and remains low. At present,these viruses are not thought to be capable of sustained human-to-human transmission,although this could change as they evolve. Although human infections with viruses of animal origin are infrequent, they are not unexpected at the human-animal interface.

IHR compliance6: This includes any influenza A virus that has demonstrated the capacity to infect a human and its haemagglutinin (HA) gene (or protein) is not a mutated form of those, i.e. A(H1)or A(H3), circulating widely in the human population. Information from these notifications is critical to inform risk assessments for influenza at the human-animal interface.

       (SNIP)

Avian influenza viruses in humans A(H5N1), Bangladesh 

On 23 April 2026, Bangladesh notified WHO of one laboratory-confirmed human case of avian influenza A(H5) infection in a child from Sylhet Division. The patient developed fever and cough on 27 March 2026 and was admitted to hospital on 28 March with a clinical diagnosis of measles with bronchopneumonia.

As part of hospital-based influenza surveillance, a sample was collected on 29 March and received by the Institute of Epidemiology, Disease Control and Research(IEDCR) on 20 April. The sample tested positive for influenza A(H5N1) on the same day by real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). The patient was discharged on 30 March. No additional cases were reported among identified contacts. Epidemiological investigations identified exposure to household poultry.

This is the second laboratory-confirmed human case of avian influenza A(H5N1) reported in Bangladesh in 2026.

 A(H5N1), Cambodia

On 22 April 2026, Cambodia notified WHO of one laboratory-confirmed human case of avian influenza A(H5) infection in a 66-year-old woman with comorbidities from Svay Rieng province. The patient developed symptoms on 15 April 2026 and was admitted to district hospital on 16 April and provincial hospital the next day.

As part of severe acute respiratory infection surveillance, a sample was collected on 17 April and received by the National Institute of Public Health on 21 April. The sample tested positive for influenza A(H5N1) on the same day by real-time RT-PCR, and the result was confirmed by Institut Pasteur du Cambodge on 22 April. The patient died on 22 April. No additional cases were reported among 15 identified contacts. Epidemiological investigations identified exposure to sick and dead household chickens prior to illness onset.

        A(H5N1), India

On 27 March 2026, India notified WHO of one laboratory-confirmed human case of avian influenza A(H5N1) infection in a child from West Bengal state. The patient developed fever and cough and was admitted to hospital on 19 March. The patient was discharged on 23 March

Laboratory testing at the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) National Institute of Virology in Pune confirmed influenza A(H5N1). Genomic sequencing identified the virus as belonging to clade 2.3.2.1a, closely related to strains previously reported from Bangladesh and India in 2025. No additional cases were reported among identified contacts. Epidemiological investigations identified likely indirect exposure to poultry.This is the first laboratory-confirmed human case of avian influenza A(H5N1) reported in India in 2026. 

 A(H5N6), China

On 29 April 2026, China notified WHO of one laboratory-confirmed human case of avian influenza A(H5N6) infection in a 55-year-old female with comorbidities from Chongqing Municipality. She had onset of symptoms on 16 April 2026 and was hospitalized on 23 April with severe pneumonia. The patient died on 3 May 2026. She had slaughtered and prepared poultry prior to onset of  symptoms. Environmental samples collected from the food preparation tools at the patient’s residence tested positive for influenza A(H5). No further cases were detected among contacts of the patient.This is the first laboratory-confirmed human case of infection with an A(H5N6) virus detected since 2024.

        (SNIP)

A(H9N2), China

Between 7 April and 6 May 2026, China notified WHO of five laboratory-confirmed cases of A(H9N2)virus infection.  

The first case had comorbidities and developed severe pneumonia. All the cases except the child from Jiangxi had exposure to live bird markets or household birds. Samples from environments associated with the likely area of exposure of some of these cases tested positive for A(H9) viruses. No further cases were detected among contacts of these cases.

        (Continue . . . )

As always, the WHO spends a good deal of time imploring member nations to abide by the 2005 IHR regulations which require prompt notification of all human infections caused by novel flu subtypes.
It is critical that these influenza viruses from animals or from humans are fully characterized inappropriate animal or human health influenza reference laboratories. Under WHO’s Pandemic Influenza Preparedness (PIP) Framework, Member States are expected to share influenza viruses with pandemic potential on a timely basis15 with a WHO Collaborating Centre for influenza of GISRS. The viruses are used by the public health laboratories to assess the risk of pandemic influenza and to develop candidate vaccine viruses.
But, according to a report 3 years ago (see Lancet Preprint: National Surveillance for Novel Diseases - A Systematic Analysis of 195 Countries), many member nations still lack the capability to fully investigate cases. 
While none of these novel flu viruses currently show signs of spreading efficiently between humans, the general consensus is the next pandemic isn't a matter of `if', only a matter of `when' (see BMJ Global: Historical Trends Demonstrate a Pattern of Increasingly Frequent & Severe Zoonotic Spillover Events).

The only real question is; will we be ready when it comes.

Saturday, June 06, 2026

CDC MMWR: Modeled Scenario Projections for the Ebola Disease Outbreak Caused by Bundibugyo Virus, 2026



All models are wrong, but some models are useful.George E. P. Box (18 October 1919 – 28 March 2013) - Professor Emeritus of Statistics at the University of Wisconsin

#19,190

Late yesterday afternoon the CDC held an update (see transcript & video) on the the Ebola virus outbreak in Central Africa, focusing specifically on 3 new reports published Friday in the CDC's MMWR.  

The third report, however - which modeled a variety of possible scenarios for the Ebola Outbreak - was the primary topic of discussion during this presentation.  
As with all such models, this isn't a prediction of what will be, only what might be, if certain things aren't done to prevent it. 
Based on the following comment from Dr. Pillai during the teleconference, the example given in the summary (70% of cases isolated in 1st 48 hours) doesn't currently appear to be happening:

Dr. Pillai

Currently, the situation is very fluid, and while the numbers are not completely known, based on the trajectory of the outbreak and the rapid extension into multiple different health zones over a short period of time, this appears to be in one of the lower end of the percentage of individuals that are being detected and isolated.

The range of outcomes - based heavily on success in identifying and isolating cases - is depicted in the following chart. If the success rate is < 50%, the risks of seeing 20,000+ cases over the next 3 months rises markedly. 


First, some excerpts from the report, after which I'll have a bit more. 
Modeled Scenario Projections for the Ebola Disease Outbreak Caused by Bundibugyo Virus, 2026
Early Release / June 5, 2026 / 75
 
Eric Q. Mooring, ScD1,2; William T. Koval, PhD1; Isobel Routledge, PhD3; Inga Holmdahl, PhD4; Guido EspaƱa, PhD1; Rebecca Kahn, PhD4; Beau B. Bruce, MD, PhD1  


Summary

What is already known about this topic?

An outbreak of Bundibugyo virus disease (BVD), a type of Ebola disease, is currently ongoing, centered in the Ituri province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

What is added by this report?

CDC used a transmission model to project outbreak growth over 3 months, by using different assumptions about the number of deaths as of May 24, 2026, and by varying the percentages of persons with BVD who are successfully identified and isolated to prevent ongoing transmission. Assuming 50 cumulative deaths as of May 24, 2026, if 70% of patients were to enter isolation, only approximately one in 20 simulations projected an outbreak exceeding 10,000 cases within 3 months.

What are the implications for public health practice?

Large-scale, rapid public health action is needed to control the current outbreak, already the largest known BVD outbreak, from becoming one of the largest Ebola epidemics in history.

        (SNIP)

Outbreak Size Projections and Inferred Spillover Date by Assumed Number of Deaths

Assuming 50 deaths. The model calibrated to 50 deaths estimated that the spillover event that triggered this outbreak most likely occurred on approximately February 19, 2026 (interquartile interval [IQI] = February 1–March 8). Assuming that 20% of infected persons were successfully isolated beginning May 24, 2026, projections showed ≥20,000 cumulative cases in 65% of simulations, ≥10,000 cumulative cases in 85% of simulations, and ≥4,000 cumulative deaths in 69% of simulations (Figure).

Even with 50% of infected persons isolated, many simulations still projected these numbers of cases but were less likely to occur (17% of simulations projected ≥20,000 cases and 22% projected ≥4,000 deaths). At 70% isolation, projected outbreaks were much more likely to be smaller, but still of substantial size, with 94% of simulations projecting <10,000 cases and only 1% projecting ≥20,000 cases; similarly, at this isolation level, 90% of simulations projected <2,000 deaths and only 3% projected ≥4,000 deaths. Re declined proportional to the percentage of infected persons successfully isolated (Supplementary Figure 1).

Assuming 100 deaths. Assuming 100 cumulative deaths as of May 24, 2026, the inferred median spillover date was February 8, 2026 (IQI = January 21–February 27). Very large outbreaks were likely in the scenario in which only 20% of patients were isolated (76% of simulations projected ≥20,000 cases and 87% projected ≥4,000 deaths). In the scenario in which 70% of infected persons were isolated, 73% of simulations projected <2,000 cumulative deaths by August 22, 2026, and 10% projected ≥4,000 deaths (Supplementary Figure 2).

Assuming 200 deaths. Assuming 200 deaths by May 24, 2026, the calibrated model inferred a median spillover date of January 29, 2026 (IQI = January 9–February 18). The earlier spillover date would have generated a larger outbreak by the time interventions began; thus, even with 70% of infected persons isolated, 42% of simulations projected ≥10,000 cases by August 22, 2026.

Sensitivity to Basic Reproductive Number

Simulated outbreaks with R0 values higher than the median R0 typically reached ≥10,000 cumulative cases and ≥2,000 cumulative deaths by August 22, 2026, in scenarios with ≤50% isolation, even assuming only 50 cumulative deaths by May 24. In the scenario with 70% of infected persons isolated and 50 assumed deaths by May 24, 2026, no simulations projected ≥2,000 deaths when R0 values were lower than the median R0, but 20% of simulations projected ≥2,000 deaths when R0 values exceeded the median (Supplementary Figure 3).

        (SNIP)

The high probability of a large outbreak over a 3-month period primarily results from the large size of the outbreak at the time it was initially confirmed. This analysis did not provide evidence that R0 for this outbreak is unusually large.† Time between Ebola outbreak onset and detection is positively correlated with overall outbreak size and duration (4).

CDC’s assessment that the risk to the general U.S. population is low (5) is not changed by this analysis. Despite the unprecedented size of the 2014–2016 West Africa Ebola epidemic, only two Ebola transmission events occurred in the United States. Those two infected persons were health care workers caring for a patient with Ebola who had traveled to the United States before enhanced screening, risk assessment, and health education measures were implemented at U.S. ports of entry (6). Both persons infected in the United States recovered.

       (Continue . . . )
 

All three MMWR reports are worth reading in their entirety, and the video presentation (21 minutes) is very much worth watching. 

While conditions could change, right now the DRC and surrounding countries appear to be on a trajectory that could eventually equal or even exceed that seen during the 2014-2016 West African Ebola Outbreak (28K cases, 11K deaths). 

But, as they say, `If you've seen one epidemic . . . you've seen one epidemic.'  The Bundibugyo virus is a different threat than Ebola Zaire, and the conditions in the DRC, Uganda, and South Sudan differ as well. 

For now, this is 99% a regional threat.  Exported cases are a possibility, but large outbreaks in places like Europe or North America - which are far better prepared to deal with this virus - are unlikely. 

But all of this assumes that reasonable containment efforts are made - or even possible - at ground zero.  Long chains of human-to-human transmission are problematic with any zoonotic virus, as it increases the chances that the virus will better adapt to a human host.

Which makes it very much worth our while to do whatever we can to help  bring this outbreak under control.

Sooner, rather than later. 

Friday, June 05, 2026

FluView Week #20: EOY Review of Increased Detection of Oseltamivir Resistant H1N1 Viruses


Abrupt rise in Oseltamivir resistance in Catalonia, Spain - fall 2025

#19,189

For the past 3 years we've been following sporadic reports of `reduced susceptibility' of the seasonal H1N1 flu virus to the antiviral drug oseltamivir (aka `Tamiflu') around the globe (see EID Journal: Multicountry Spread of Influenza A(H1N1)pdm09 Viruses with Reduced Oseltamivir Inhibition, May 2023–February 2024).

While concerning, these reports indicated reduced inhibition - not complete failure - and its incidence has been modest; typically in the low single digits.   
The main culprit in all of this has been an increase in the S247N mutation (often combined with I223V), which can reduce the effectiveness of oseltamivir 7 to 16 fold. 

Less common, but far more impactful, is the H275Y mutation, which can effectively render oseltamivir useless. This was the cause of the `Tamiflu failure' of 2008, which temporarily forced the CDC to change their flu treatment guidelines.

Luckily, the arrival of a new, and still susceptible pandemic H1N1 virus in 2009 granted oseltamivir an unexpected reprieve, but since then we've kept a close eye out for any genetic changes that could affect its effectiveness. 

Last summer, in Virus Research: A 15-year Study of Neuraminidase Mutations and the Increasing of S247N Mutation in Spain, we looked at a study that found a sharp increase in detections of the S247N mutation beginning in 2024. 

Highlights

• In a landscape of a very narrow arsenal of influenza antivirals, resistance mutations are a significant threat.

• Resistance mutations were present in 0.5-5% in A and B influenza viruses during the last 15 years.

• However, S247N resistance mutation in the NA gene sharply increased during 2023-2024 season.

• While this mutation does not confer strong resistance by itself, their fixation could increase the risk of resistance in the future if other resistance mutations appears or get fixed together with it
Over the 2025-2026 flu season we've continued to see scattered reports of resistance, including Taiwan's CDC reported that 6.5% of the H1N1 viruses characterized in 2025 showed signs of oseltamivir resistance, and China: National Influenza Center Reporting Increased Oseltamivir Resistance in Seasonal H1N1

As for detections in the United States, as we saw last February, over the entire 2024-2025 flu season - out of 1697 H1N1 viruses tested - only one carried the NA-I223V and NA-S247N amino acid substitutions.

And reassuringly, during the first 13 weeks of the 2025-2026 flu season (Oct - Dec) the CDC reported zero elevated resistance among the first 193 H1N1 viruses tested (see screenshot from FluView Wk 53).  


But by the end of February, 2026 (FluView Week 7), things had begun to change. Based now on 517 H1N1 isolates tested since October 2026 - the CDC reported 10 viruses with reduced susceptibility and 4 with highly reduced inhibition.

Four A(H1N1)pdm09 viruses had NA-H275Y amino acid substitution conferring highly reduced inhibition by oseltamivir and peramivir. Ten A(H1N1)pdm09 viruses had amino acid substitutions NA-I223V and NA-S247N and showed reduced inhibition by oseltamivir. Two B viruses had amino acid substitution NA- M464T and showed reduced inhibition by peramivir.
Last Friday the CDC published their last full FluView report of the 2025-2026 flu season (week 20), which contained the following brief update on oseltamivir resistant viruses. 



Nine A(H1N1)pdm09 viruses had NA-H275Y amino acid substitution conferring highly reduced inhibition by oseltamivir and peramivir. Nineteen A(H1N1)pdm09 viruses had amino acid substitutions NA-I223V and NA-S247N and showed reduced inhibition by oseltamivir. One A(H1N1)pdm09 virus had amino acid substitutions NA-I223T and NA-S247N and showed reduced inhibition by oseltamivir. Two A(H3N2) viruses had amino acid substitution NA-E119V conferring highly reduced inhibition by oseltamivir. Three B viruses had amino acid substitution NA-M464T and showed reduced inhibition by peramivir.


While the number of S247N+I223V mutations remains low (2.1%), this is more than a 35-fold increase over the previous year, making this a trend well worth following. 

The incidence of the far more impactful H275Y mutation (1%) remains about average, but there are concerns that the stacking of H275Y with either I223V or S247N could greatly enhance its impact.

None of this is to suggest we are on the verge of another antiviral crisis, only that we continue to see some concerning trends. And given the gaps in global influenza surveillance and reporting, we are only seeing part of the picture.

As we are so frequently reminded - evolution never stops - and while our current antiviral armamentarium remains effective against seasonal H1N1, the events of 2008 reminds us how quickly that can change. 

Stay tuned.

Thursday, June 04, 2026

USDA: USDA Confirms Presence of New World Screwworm in the United States

 

#19,188

The New World Screwworm (NWS aka Cochliomyia hominivorax) - which was eliminated in the United States during the 1960s - is a flesh-eating parasitic fly that lays its eggs in the open wounds of warm-blooded animals (often cattle and deer, but occasionally humans).

Unlike most fly maggots, which feed on dead tissue, NWS larva consume and burrow into live tissue, causing substantial morbidity and mortality. (See ASM 2025 Review New World Screwworm: Rise, Fall and Resurgence).

During the 1980s, eradication efforts - primarily utilizing the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) - expanded NWS elimination southward through Mexico and Central America, to the Darien Gap in  Panama where for many years (starting in 1996) the line was held. 

But in 2023, the number of screwworm detections in Panama surged from a few dozen to thousands, and the infestation began moving northward again. While likely due to a myriad of reasons - including climate change and human migration - supply chain issues during the COVID pandemic is often cited as a factor. 

Since then, the NWS has been moving north steadily, and has been reported getting closer to the U.S./Mexico border in recent months. In August of last year, the HHS reported a Singular Traveler-Associated New World Screwworm Case

The USDA has produced its own projections of the economic impact of NWS (in 2024), which finds it could cost Texas farmers nearly 2 billion dollars a year.



Not unexpectedly, last night the USDA announced the first detection of NWS on a farm in Southern Texas. While this is not a big public health concern, should it spread widely, it could prove quite costly to the cattle industry. 
Last night's announcement focuses primarily on reassuring the public (about food safety, and that authorities are responding aggressively). While serious, for now this remains a single detected incursionnot evidence of established transmission within the United States.   
First the announcement from the USDA (h/t to Sharon Sanders on FT for the head's up), after which I'll have a bit more. 

USDA Confirms Presence of New World Screwworm in the United States

Contact: aphispress@usda.gov

Animal Health Officials Working Quickly to Protect U.S. Livestock and Wildlife

WASHINGTON, DC, JUNE 03, 2026 – The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) confirmed the detection of a New World screwworm (NWS) in a bovine in Zavala County, Texas. NWS is a serious pest that affects livestock, pets, wildlife, and less commonly, people and birds. NWS larvae (maggots) burrow into the flesh of living animals, causing serious damage to livestock and economic losses.

The affected animal is a 3-week-old calf and larvae were identified in its umbilical area. To date, there have been no further detections.

“All models showed New World Screwworm entering the country in 2025; however, thanks to the hard work across the entire Trump administration and our industry, state, and local partners, we were able to buy time for this moment. Protecting our livestock industry is a national security issue of the utmost importance, and USDA is wasting no time in taking action,” said Dudley Hoskins, Under Secretary for Marketing and Regulatory Programs. “USDA invested heavily in the tools needed to eliminate NWS ever since cases started increasing in Central America and Mexico. The United States has defeated this pest before, and we will do it again.”

USDA and Texas officials are taking immediate action to contain and eradicate NWS from the United States, following the strategies and actions outlined in the NWS Response Playbook. This includes:
  • Forming a unified Incident Command Team with the Texas Animal Health Commission and deploying response personnel to the area;
  • Establishing a 20 km infested zone around the detection and implementing quarantines, movement controls, and surveillance in this area;
  • Expediting targeted release of sterile NWS flies by immediately deploying ground release chambers in the area, in addition to the 4 million sterile flies per week already being released aerially in the area;
  • Increasing trapping for NWS flies along the border and just outside of the dispersal area;
  • Implementing NWS surveillance and management strategies in wildlife; and
  • Conducting targeted outreach in the local area.
Additionally, USDA’s National Veterinary Stockpile stands ready to assist, and will provide resources including treatments, equipment, and logistics support the response as needed.

USDA will continue to work with state departments of agriculture, animal health officials, industry, and producers to mitigate economic impacts of restrictions as much as possible, including negotiating with our trading partners to regionalize any trade restrictions on live animals, limiting them to defined geographic areas.

NWS maggots can infest livestock and other warm-blooded animals, including in rare cases people. They most often enter an animal through an open wound and feed on the animal’s living flesh.

USDA urges residents in the area to check their pets and livestock for signs of NWS. Look for draining or enlarging wounds and signs of discomfort. Also look for screwworm larvae (maggots) and eggs in or around body openings, such as the nose, ears, and genitalia or the navel of newborn animals. If you suspect your animal is infected with screwworm, contact your state animal health official or USDA area veterinarian in charge immediately.

While not common in people, if you notice a suspicious lesion on your body or suspect you may have contracted screwworm, seek immediate medical attention.

The U.S. food supply is safe. Screwworms do not infest meat, fruits, vegetables, or other food sources. USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) ensures that the nation’s commercial supply of meat, poultry, and egg products is safe and properly labeled. Under the Federal Meat Inspection Act (FMIA), FSIS inspection personnel must inspect all eligible animal species unless they are exempt or covered by a state inspection program.

Any evidence of screwworm infestation in an animal would be identified during these inspections, and any contaminated product from an affected animal would not be allowed to enter the food supply.

For more than a year, USDA has led a unified response to NWS. As the lead coordinating agency, USDA has deployed advanced surveillance systems and supported robust cross-border response efforts in Mexico and Central America to combat the pest and push NWS away from the United States. These efforts have bought time for USDA to increase domestic preparedness efforts.

Learn more about New World screwworm at Screwworm.gov.


All this comes at a particularly bad time, since U.S. cattle inventories are already at their lowest level in decades (due to prolonged droughts and high feed costs), and beef prices are at record highs. 

 As we've seen previously, the introduction (or reintroduction) of agricultural and human diseases can be difficult to contain. A few examples include:

The good news is the USDA has known this day was coming, and has been actively preparing for it. Last April, the USDA released an Updated New World Screwworm Response Playbook, and in January announced the  Completion of Sterile Fly Dispersal Facility in Texas

With a little luck, this breach can be contained.  

But as long as the NWS continues to circulate in Mexico, future incursions are all but inevitable. And with all such border interdictions, the defender must succeed 100% time, while the invader only has to succeed once. 
  

Wednesday, June 03, 2026

Preprint: Increased burden of influenza A/H1N1pdm09 in older adults following the COVID-19 pandemic


#19,187

If there is one constant with influenza A viruses, it is that they are constantly changing; meaning that things that we may have assumed to be true for years or even decades can abruptly change.  

One such `truism' has been that H1N1 viruses pose more of a risk to younger individuals - those born after the 1957 H2N2 pandemic emerged - than to the elderly (see PLoS Path.: Childhood Immune Imprinting to Influenza A).

While older individuals weren't immune to H1N1, they have tended to be less susceptible to infection - and typically saw milder disease - than from the H3N2 subtype.

At least - according to a preprint published last week - until 2022, when a new clade of H1N1 emerged (6B.1A.5a.2a) after the COVID-19 induced lull, which appears to have become more impactful on the elderly. 

Although it was overshadowed by the outbreaks of early May (hantavirus & Ebola), the JID reported a similar finding (see Effects of Age and Birth Cohort on Influenza A Virus Subtype-Specific Hospitalization Rates, United States, 2010–2025) in late April.
 
Assuming these reports are correct, the notion that the elderly might enjoy a bit of a respite during H1N1 centric flu seasons may no longer be true, and that could substantially increase the burden on healthcare facilities. 

An additional caveat: it has not been established whether (or how strongly) this pattern will persist as H1N1 continues to evolve.  Clade 5a.2a has already been largely replaced by newer subclades (see week 20 FluView), so ongoing surveillance and analysis is needed. 

 
First, the link and some excerpts from the preprint, but the full report is very much worth reading.

Increased burden of influenza A/H1N1pdm09 in older adults following the COVID-19 pandemic
Simon P. J. de Jong, Colin A. Russell
doi: https://doi.org/10.64898/2026.05.20.26353664
This article is a preprint and has not been peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Of the two influenza A virus (IAV) subtypes circulating endemically in humans, A/H3N2 and A/H1N1pdm09, A/H3N2 has historically been the dominant driver of disease burden in older adults. Based on an analysis of publicly available global surveillance data from 2015 to 2025 (>300,000 subtyped, age-stratified infections), we report a substantially increased contribution of A/H1N1pdm09 to influenza morbidity in older adults since approximately 2022.

Birth cohort-stratified analyses suggest elevated A/H1N1pdm09 burden among individuals born before 1955-1959, consistent with erosion of pre-existing immunity originally generated by exposure to historical A/H1N1 strains. Pooled estimates across datasets and analytical approaches indicate the increase in A/H1N1pdm09 burden rises with earlier birth year, ranging from 1.22-fold (95% CI 1.08-1.37) for the 1955-1959 birth cohort to 3.10-fold (95% CI 2.58-3.72) for the 1930-1934 cohort. These findings point to a substantial rise in the overall influenza burden among the most vulnerable age groups, with implications for vaccine policy, clinical management, and public health planning.

Main text

Older adults are at markedly elevated risk of severe outcomes from influenza. Of the two influenza A virus (IAV) subtypes currently circulating in humans, A/H3N2 and A/H1N1pdm09, A/H3N2 has historically disproportionately contributed to influenza burden in older adults1,2. However, emerging evidence suggests possible shifts in this epidemiological landscape. A recent US-based study reported increasing contributions of A/H1N1pdm09 virus infections to influenza hospitalizations among older adults since the COVID-19 pandemic3.

        (SNIP)


The apparent increases in A/H1N1pdm09 risk are greatest in the earliest birth cohorts (Fig. 2). This could have substantial clinical and public health implications, as risk of severe influenza disease and mortality increases strongly with age5,6. As such, our results have implications for healthcare capacity planning, with likely substantially elevated acute and post-acute healthcare demand due to influenza compared to a counterfactual in which no immune erosion had occurred. The severity of the 2024/2025 US influenza season potentially reflects the erosion of protection in early birth cohorts3, with adults aged 75 and over experiencing the highest rates of A/H1N1pdm09-associated hospitalization since the 2009 pandemic16.

Vaccines have demonstrated effectiveness against A/H1N1pdm09 among adults aged 65 and over in the post-pandemic period17,18, but new targeted analyses in the earliest birth cohorts, for which estimated increase in burden is greatest (Fig. 2), would be valuable. A potential concern is that individuals whose immunity was shaped predominantly by early-life responses to historical A/H1N1 epitopes may, through repeated boosting of those same responses, lack immunity to epitopes on strains circulating since 2022, leaving them with little cross-reactive protection to recall upon vaccination or infection. These uncertainties notwithstanding, the elevated A/H1N1pdm09 risk suggested here further strengthens the case for vaccination in these birth cohorts and has implications for vaccination strategies, including the value and cost-effectiveness of enhanced formulations which have demonstrated superior immunogenicity and effectiveness in older adults19.
The US and Brazil hospitalization data indicate increased burden of severe disease due to A/H1N1pdm09, but whether this is due to changes in infection risk and/or changes in clinical severity warrants further investigation, particularly given that A/H1N1pdm09 was associated with relatively severe outcomes among hospitalized adults before the COVID-19 pandemic20,21.
Our analyses rely on observational data and are susceptible to reporting biases; however, consistency across four surveillance systems with distinct ascertainment mechanisms and varying analysis methods makes a surveillance artifact implausible. Replication with additional age- and subtype-resolved surveillance data would further substantiate our findings.
Together, our results indicate that the earliest birth cohorts, who are the most clinically vulnerable and have historically been considered relatively protected from influenza A/H1N1pdm09, likely now face substantially elevated risk from these viruses.
This carries potential implications for vaccine policy and healthcare capacity planning. Ensuring that surveillance infrastructure captures age- and subtype-resolved influenza data globally will be essential for tracking this shift and quantifying its consequences for the populations most at risk for severe influenza.
        (Continue . . . )

We tend to think that next year's seasonal flu will be pretty much like last year's, and the year before.  But even non-pandemic flu viruses can throw us curves. 
All reasons why we should give seasonal flu the respect it deserves.