if anyone is interested my shop is https://www.etsy.com/shop/matulasmercantile and all mask chain proceeds goes to not only a disabled person but also goes towards buying masks for my local mask bloc 😷💕

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if anyone is interested my shop is https://www.etsy.com/shop/matulasmercantile and all mask chain proceeds goes to not only a disabled person but also goes towards buying masks for my local mask bloc 😷💕
Vacancies in a key office of pandemic preparedness raise concern.
Meanwhile, health secretary and anti-vaccine advocate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has suggested that poultry farmers should let the virus run rampant through flocks rather than safely cull them, which is currently required. Farmers "should consider maybe the possibility of letting it run through the flock so that we can identify the birds, and preserve the birds, that are immune to it," Kennedy, who has no health or science background, said during an interview on Fox News.
M.I.A. - BirdFlu (Mata Tour Remix)
SCIENTISTS JUST FOUND THE MUTATION THEY’VE BEEN DREADING IN CALIFORNIA DAIRY COWS
It’s called PB2 E627K and it’s the virus’s cheat code for infecting mammals
Alright virologists and doom-scrollers, gather ‘round because this one’s gonna keep you up at night.
Remember that bird flu in cows situation? Yeah, it just got significantly more concerning.
The Setup:
For almost a year, H5N1 bird flu has been vibing in dairy cows, mostly causing:
Weird thick milk
Grumpy cows
Not much else
Scientists were like “okay this is manageable, the virus is still basically a bird virus trying to figure out how to cow”
The Plot Twist:
In March 2025, researchers found something in 4 California dairy herds that made them collectively go “oh sh*t”:
The PB2 E627K mutation.
Why This Matters (like, REALLY matters):
This isn’t just any mutation. This specific change:
Makes the virus “extremely pathogenic” in mammals
Helps it replicate better in mammalian cells
Was found in the first human case in Texas (who thankfully recovered)
In lab tests with ferrets? 100% fatal with airborne spread
Dr. Yoshihiro Kawaoka (basically the final boss of flu research) said finding this in cows is “significant” which in scientist-speak means “VERY NOT GOOD.”
The Timeline of Terror:
April 2024: First human case in Texas has this mutation
For months: Not found in any cow samples (phew)
March 2025: Shows up in California cows (NOT PHEW)
“Each additional mammalian infection is an opportunity for the virus to acquire adaptations that could make it more dangerous to mammals”
Translation: Every infected cow is basically a viral laboratory experimenting with how to infect us better.
What It Means:
The virus is actively evolving IN REAL TIME
It’s learning how to be a better mammal virus
We’re watching evolution happen at warp speed
California’s massive dairy industry = massive evolutionary playground
The Good News (because we need some):
Still no human-to-human transmission detected
Most human cases have been mild
We’re watching it closely
Pasteurized milk still safe (THANK GOD)
The Reality Check:
We’re basically in a race between:
The virus figuring out mammals
Us figuring out how to stop it
And folks? The virus doesn’t take weekends off.
Stay informed, stay cautious, but don’t panic. Yet.
Reblog to spread awareness faster than this virus spreads mutations 🧬
CDC communications shutdown by Trump. Bird Flu is around the country now DO NOT go near a sick or dead bird(owl, duck, chicken, etc). Call your state health dept
Bird flu could evolve to spread between humans through the air. Read more: https://www.passporthealthusa.com/2025/04/what-you-need-to-know-about-avian-flu-in-2025/
on my president trump bingo card:
bird flu will continue to spread and we will have another coop that is infected. conservatives will say that birdflu is a fake virus created by the woke mob to increase the price of eggs- so trump will sign an executive order banning the killing of infected birds. then more people will contract birdflu from work and die. trump will then blame china for "making birdflu in a lab to attack america"
WEAR A MASK BECAUSE YOU DON'T NEED TO BE AN INCUBATOR
It's one mutation away from getting more dangerous to humans.
At least 58 people in the U.S. have been infected by the H5N1 bird flu virus this year, according to federal statistics. All but two of them had been around cows or chickens, two species in which H5N1 is circulating widely. That’s reassuring to scientists because it suggests the virus is spreading primarily through close contact with infected animals, and not from person to person.
Less comforting are the results of a study published Dec. 5 in the journal Science: the H5N1 strain spreading among U.S. cows is only one specific mutation away from more easily binding to human cells, “a prerequisite for transmission among humans,” says study co-author James Paulson, a professor in the department of molecular medicine at Scripps Research in California.
In its current form, the H5N1 virus is better at infecting certain animal species than humans. It has sickened millions of birds and cows from more than 700 U.S. dairy herds, but a relatively small number of people.
Most of those human cases have been among farmworkers. That suggests that—even though the bird flu virus isn’t very good at infecting humans—it sometimes finds a way when people are exposed to high enough concentrations of it, such as through close contact with sick animals, explains Troy Sutton, an assistant professor of veterinary and biomedical sciences at Penn State University, who wasn’t involved in the new study. Because the virus isn’t good at growing in the human nose and throat, however, people who get sick don’t seem able to easily infect others by coughing or sneezing, as happens with the regular seasonal flu, Sutton says.
If the bird flu changes enough to effectively infect, grow in, and jump between people,“that’s how a pandemic starts,” Paulson says.
His team focused on the first step in that process: how the virus would need to change to easily bind to human cells. In the lab, they studied a synthetic form of a gene from the viral strain that is currently circulating among cows. They made targeted mutations to see how the shifts altered its ability to attach to human cells. “The surprising finding,” Paulson says, was that one specific mutation seemed to be enough. Previous research on H5N1, including Paulson’s, had suggested that more changes would be required.
“The emergence of a bovine H5N1 virus capable of recognizing human receptors may be closer than previously thought,” Yoshihiro Kawaoka, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who studies bird flu but was not involved in the new study, wrote in an email to TIME.
Read More: Did the Pandemic Break Our Brains?
That’s a “striking” finding, Sutton agrees, and a good motivation to prevent further human cases to the extent possible. Already, federal health officials recommend that high-risk people, such as farmworkers, wear personal protective equipment around animals that may be sick and take flu antivirals (which also seem to work against bird flu) if they have a potential exposure.
Still, Paulson emphasizes that his study does not mean a pandemic is imminent. Despite what his team found in the lab, the virus circulating in the real world does not seem to have evolved to easily target humans. Public-health officials maintain that the virus is not spreading from person to person and currently presents a low risk to the general public.
More changes might be necessary for the virus to present a true pandemic threat. The ability to easily bind to human cells—which Paulson’s team tested for—is only the first step toward widespread person-to-person transmission, he says. Further changes might be needed for the virus to become highly contagious in the real world.
Kawaoka agrees. The fact that more than 50 people in the U.S. have gotten sick, but health officials have not seen any evidence of person-to-person spread, suggests that “additional mutations are likely necessary for the virus to achieve efficient human-to-human transmission,” he wrote.
Read More: Is it Time to Worry About Bird Flu?
Health officials are closely monitoring the situation, and some worrying observations have already been documented. Recently, a Canadian teenager who caught bird flu was hospitalized. When scientists analyzed the genetic sequence of the virus taken from the teen, they reportedly found that it had mutated in a way that could make it more transmissible among people, similar to the mutation Paulson’s team identified in their study. (Luckily, though, the teen doesn’t seem to have infected anyone else.)
Kawaoka has also studied a viral strain taken from an infected U.S. farmworker. That strain, which was able to grow in samples of human lung cells, contained a mutation known to promote viral growth among mammals, Kawaoka and his team found. But that mutation is not seen in the viral strains spreading among cows, his team emphasized when the study was published in October.
Although there is no evidence of person-to-person spread yet, Paulson says health authorities should prepare for wider spread of bird flu as a precaution. It’s worth stockpiling bird flu vaccines and making plans for how they would be rolled out if they become necessary, he says.
It’s also important to keep closely monitoring the virus for any signs of change, Sutton says. But “what’s alarming to me is that we often realize we have a pandemic after the pandemic has started,” he says. “If we started to see this mutation, would it already be too late? We don’t know the answer to that.”