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With more human cases of H5N1 being identified, Fox News senior medical analyst Dr. Marc Siegel offers thoughts on mutating strains, stockpiled vaccines and why people shouldn't panic. The first presumed human case of avian influenza (H5N1, or bird flu) has been reported in Canada.

Canada's Health Minister Mark Holland confirmed the report in a post on X. "To date, there has been no evidence of person-to-person spread of the virus in any of the cases identified globally," he wrote. "Based on current evidence in Canada , the risk to the general public remains low.



" FIRST CASE OF HUMAN BIRD FLU DIAGNOSED WITHOUT EXPOSURE TO INFECTED ANIMALS, CDC SAYS Holland also noted that the Public Health Agency of Canada is working with the BC (British Columbia) Centre of Disease Control and Office of the Provincial Health Officer, and that the agencies "will remain in close contact to protect Canadians." The patient, a teenager in British Columbia, is currently being treated at BC Children’s Hospital , according to a press release from the BC government. "A public-health investigation has been initiated to determine the source of exposure and identify any contacts," the province stated in the release.

PIG INFECTED WITH BIRD FLU FOR FIRST TIME IN US, HEALTH OFFICIALS CONFIRM "The source of exposure is very likely to be an animal or bird, and is being investigated by B.C.’s chief veterinarian and public health teams.

" Sam Scarpino, PhD, director of AI and life sciences at Northeastern Un.

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