Recently released geese waddle toward the Muddy River after being released into the Brookline park on Jan. 3, 2025, following an oil spill in the area last month.
While avian influenza is extremely fatal to birds, Rhode Island health officials say the presence of the virus in the state doesn’t pose a significant public health risk.
Alexi Cohan/GBH News

Avian Flu has Been Detected in Rhode Island. Here’s What You Need to Know

While avian influenza is extremely fatal to birds, Rhode Island health officials say the presence of the virus in the state doesn’t pose a significant public health risk

While avian influenza is extremely fatal to birds, Rhode Island health officials say the presence of the virus in the state doesn’t pose a significant public health risk

1 min read
Share
Recently released geese waddle toward the Muddy River after being released into the Brookline park on Jan. 3, 2025, following an oil spill in the area last month.
While avian influenza is extremely fatal to birds, Rhode Island health officials say the presence of the virus in the state doesn’t pose a significant public health risk.
Alexi Cohan/GBH News
Avian Flu has Been Detected in Rhode Island. Here’s What You Need to Know
Copy

Last month, a flock of birds in southern Rhode Island was euthanized after they were found to be infected with H5N1 avian influenza. While the threat to public health is considered to be low, Dr. Suzanne Bornschein, medical director and state epidemiologist at the Rhode Island Department of Health, says you should take some necessary precautions to protect yourself and your pets.

Interview highlights:

How common is it for humans to be infected by avian flu?

Suzanne Bornschein: There’s still a lot we don’t know, but one thing we know for sure: No human to human spread at this time. So the public health risk for the general public is low. But if you’re somebody that works in a dairy farm or you work with an infected poultry flock, that would put you at higher risk. And then, of course, there’s always the hunters.

This interview was conducted by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire interview here.

“As much as authors are being hurt and are on the front lines being threatened, as much as educators and librarians and all of these other adults are being threatened, ultimately one of the most important populations in our country is being affected – and they are the young people from whom these books are being taken away”
President Trump’s crackdown on campus protesters reflects longstanding fault lines in American politics
‘People want to see the real me and know what I’m doing when I’m recording’
Only beaten once in his career, brash Joziah Fry from Coventry hopes to lead Johnson & Wales to a national wrestling championship