Saturday, November 16, 2024
HomehealthSwabbing poop to trace hen flu and different viruses : Brief Wave...

Swabbing poop to trace hen flu and different viruses : Brief Wave : NPR


Scholar researchers Mayisha Alam (L) and Swazi Tshabalala (R) acquire samples as a part of their work with the nonprofit BioBus.

Christine Marizzi/BioBus


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Christine Marizzi/BioBus


Scholar researchers Mayisha Alam (L) and Swazi Tshabalala (R) acquire samples as a part of their work with the nonprofit BioBus.

Christine Marizzi/BioBus

Most viruses that develop into epidemics in people start in different animals. It is how scientists suspect COVID-19 emerged.

And now, lower than 5 years after the beginning of the pandemic some scientists are involved about one other illness that would do one thing comparable: hen flu, or H5N1. Over the previous yr, the virus has spilled into cows and different animals, and even contaminated some individuals working intently with these animals.

Some scientists hope to construct a extra resilient public well being system by discovering methods to detect and to trace viruses as they unfold in animals.

One staff in New York Metropolis is doing this by tapping highschool college students from underrepresented backgrounds. Collectively, they create a extra equitable discipline of biologists whereas additionally they sniff out what might be the subsequent pandemic.

They’re serving to perceive the H5N1 outbreak. However simply this week, the CDC is investigating instances of a potential cluster of hen flu whereas others are piecing collectively what has develop into a panzootic — or a pandemic in animals.

Wish to know extra about pandemic surveillance or virology? E-mail us at shortwave@npr.org — we would cowl it on a future episode!

Hearken to Brief Wave on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

Pay attention to each episode of Brief Wave sponsor-free and assist our work at NPR by signing up for Brief Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

This episode was produced by Rachel Carlson, edited by Rebecca Ramirez and reality checked by Anil Oza and Tyler Jones. Kwesi Lee was the audio engineer.

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