Bird Flu detected in wastewater, but not in people

San Diego County has become the fifth location in California to report the environmental detection of H5 influenza virus, commonly referred to as bird flu.

This detection was made through wastewater testing conducted on Sept. 1, 2024, by WastewaterSCAN, a privately funded operation that monitors wastewater for pathogens at more than 150 sites nationwide and 57 sites across California. Regular follow up sampling has not detected any virus.

H5 influenza regularly circulates in wild birds and occasionally causes human cases. Recent outbreaks of H5N1 in cattle and a small number of human cases, primarily in farm workers, have brought attention to the virus this year.

The detection in San Diego County does not confirm the presence of a human H5 infection, the presence of live H5N1 virus, or the presence of the H5N1 B3.13 strain, also known as “Cattle Clade,” currently circulating in cattle and occasionally causing human disease in farm workers.

H5 is also regularly detected in states with infected dairy herds such as Colorado, Michigan, and Texas. No detections of the H5 influenza virus have occurred in San Diego County cattle, birds or humans in 2024. There were wild bird detections in 2022 and 2023, and a poultry flock was infected in 2022.

County Public Health Services conducts surveillance of human influenza cases all year round and receives information about lab confirmed case reports, hospitalizations and deaths. In addition, the Public Health Lab collaborates with a network of regional labs to perform ad¬vanced testing to identify novel strains that might be emerging in our region or flu virus that may not be well matched with the annual flu vaccine. Regular surveillance updates on major respiratory viruses including Influenza, COVID-19 and Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) are available online.

San Diego County has a closed sewage system, meaning that its stormwater and wastewater do not intentionally intermix. This greatly reduces, but does not eliminate, the probability that this detection is from an environmental source such as migrating birds.

The virus may have been introduced into wastewater by discarding of contaminated animal products, infected wild bird droppings entering the sewage system, human infection, or animal infection.

By Cassie N. Saunders
County of San Diego Communications Office

Reprinted courtesy San Diego County Office of Communications..