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How Deadly Is Bird Flu (H5N1)?

What the data says about the likelihood of dying if you catch the disease.

Gideon M-K; Health Nerd
7 min readJan 15, 2025
Pictured: A bigger problem than you might imagine. Photo by Brooke Cagle on Unsplash

In the era of post-COVID uncertainty, we are all hyper-aware of infectious diseases. After one pandemic, everyone’s understandably a bit on edge about the possibility of another one. Potential new outbreaks which once would barely make the bottom pages of a newspaper are now being headlined across the world.

One of the biggest concerns at the moment is bird flu, or avian influenza to use the slightly more snooty term. There are a number of different influenza viruses that infect birds, but generally when you see a headline about bird flu at the moment it’s referring to a specific type called H5N1.

If you read the headlines, the news about bird flu is very bad. Not only are there more and more cases popping up across the world — for example just 1 case in the US in 2022 but now 66 in the last 12 months — but the virus is scarily fatal. According to the World Health Organization, of the 904 cases reported globally since 2003, a staggering 464 (51%) have been fatal.

It’s a pretty scary table. Source: WHO.

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