Europeans should get used to a seasonal pattern of bird flu affecting poultry as the lethal H5N1 strain of the disease is highly likely to reappear in the near future, a senior EU health official said today.
Although H5N1 bird flu remains primarily an animal virus and poorly adapted to humans, it poses enough of a threat to human health that the EU can not afford to let up its guard because more outbreaks in birds were almost guaranteed, she said.
"Even if we had a major outbreak on H5N1 in poultry, the risk for EU citizens would still be low," Zsuzsanna Jakab, director of the Stockholm-based European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), told a news briefing.
"It may be a low-level threat but one that we must take very seriously. In birds, it has peaked for now but it is very likely it will come back," she said.
"We have to get used to a seasonal pattern -- it's quite likely it will reappear in Europe."
Occasional cases are still popping up in the EU although with far less regularity than during the January-March period. Today, Spain's Agriculture Ministry confirmed the country's first case of H5N1 bird flu.
And in mid-June, Hungary detected the disease strain in poultry. Experts fear the disease may change into a form that can be easily transmitted among humans, sweeping the world and killing millions within weeks or months.
Since 2003, it has spread rapidly from Asia to Europe and Africa, taking 131 human lives among 229 cases in 10 countries. Some 50 countries worldwide have reported cases in animals. So far, bird flu has only been transmitted to humans who were in close contact with infected live birds and no sustained human-to-human transmission of the virus has occurred.