With B.C. teen sick in hospital with suspected bird flu, what should parents know?

The surprising news that a teen is the first Canadian to contract avian flu in Canada, may have parents worried. But as Emily Lazatin reports, doctors say there is no reason to panic.

By Amy Judd & Emily Lazatin  Global News Posted November 11, 2024

Students across B.C. return to school on Tuesday but the news that a teen is in hospital in Vancouver with a suspected case of H5 bird flu has some people worried.

Dr. Anna Wolak, a family physician in Vancouver, said many parents are likely having flashbacks to the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, despite this flu being a single case.

“So my main concern is the safety of our children,” she said.

“As we go back to the crowded areas, to schools in general where children are packed in the classroom, what I am hoping is that over the summer and over the last few years of this, living with COVID, that the schools have updated their filtration, their purification and their ventilation systems.”

Click to play video: 'H5 avian flu detected in teen'

Wolak said teachers should still open windows to ventilate the rooms and clean the air in crowded areas, helping minimize kids’ exposure to an airborne virus.

The teen remains in B.C.’s Children’s Hospital and health officials are assuring the public they are working to figure out how the patient acquired the infection and who else they might have contacted.

The teenager likely caught the virus from a bird or animal, the province said in a statement over the weekend.

Wolak said there are still other respiratory viruses going around and encouraged parents and caregivers to make sure everyone’s vaccines are up to date.

“I don’t know that we need to be panicked,” she added. “But it’s always good to just be concerned, like staying home when you’re sick … vaccinating and then making sure that ventilation is adequate for children who are immunocompromised.”

H5 bird flu is widespread in wild birds worldwide and is causing outbreaks in poultry and U.S. dairy cows, with several recent human cases in U.S. dairy and poultry workers.

Human-to-human transmission is rare and there has been no evidence of sustained transmission between humans, according to Health Canada.

It is an airborne virus and cannot be contracted from eating eggs or chicken.

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