Especially in summer when there is a possibility of contact of breeded animals with the wild ones.
Yes, all birds spread bird flu
bird flu
No, Bird Flu also known as Avian Influenza,or Avian Flu can't be spread to humans. Bird flu refers to strains of influenza that primarily affect wild and domesticated birds. In the late 1990s, a new strain of bird flu arose which was unusually severe (highly pathogenic), resulting in the deaths of hundreds of millions of birds, including poultry. Although bird flu is contagious and spreads easily among birds, it is uncommon for it to be transmitted to humans.
Bird flu, swine flu and other forms of influenza are spread by infection from persons who have coughed or sneezed. It has nothing to do with sexual practices. You may or may not catch one of these forms of flu but, if you do, it will not be evidence that you have practised anal sex.
Burt Flu The Bird with Bird Flu - 2005 was released on: USA: 11 December 2005
People catch bird flu by close contact with birds or bird droppings. This is just the flu that infects birds. The bird flu that people often call the bird flu is not the same. That one is passed from person to person.Some people have caught H5N1 from cleaning or plucking infected birds. In China, there have been reports of infection via inhalation of aerosolized materials in live bird markets. And some infections have occurred in people who handle fighting cocks.There have been a few cases where one infected person caught the bird flu virus from another person -- but only after close personal contact. So far, there has been no sustained human-to-human spread of H5N1.
Dogs are not susceptible to the H5N1 bird flu.
No, bird flu is a disease caught from birds.
Dengue,Malaria,Brain fever,Swine flu,Common Cold.
To provide information on the activities, if any, of this very virulent flu virus and to give education on how to prevent the spread of all types of influenza viruses.
See the related questions for information about the symptoms of bird flu. It has serious effects both on poultry and birds, but especially on humans. 50 - 60 % of the humans who have caught bird (Avian) flu have died from the disease. It does not spread easily from human to human, but the mortality rate is severe. Birds, especially water fowl and poultry, must be isolated or killed if they get this flu, which can drastically impact commercial poultry farmers and economies where these operations are major employers in the community.
Swine Flu