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Brooklyn Kitten Becomes NYC’s Second Avian Flu Case Linked to Feline Transmission
A Brooklyn kitten has been identified as New York City’s second confirmed avian flu victim after contracting the virus from another cat highlighting a rare but growing health threat. The feline tested positive this week following the death of a Manhattan cat in February from the same strain known as H5N1. City officials are now racing to trace the outbreak’s spread among urban pets as alarm rises over potential human risks.
The kitten showed symptoms like fever and respiratory distress before vets confirmed the diagnosis. Health experts say it likely caught the virus from a neighborhood cat exposed to infected birds. This marks the first documented cat-to-cat transmission of avian flu in NYC a troubling twist in the outbreak.
The initial case involved a Manhattan cat that died after contact with a diseased pigeon near a park. Both incidents tie back to wild birds a common source of H5N1 which has ravaged poultry farms nationwide. Officials stress the risk to humans remains low but urge pet owners to limit outdoor exposure.
NYC’s Health Department launched an investigation to pinpoint how the virus jumped between felines in Brooklyn. They’ve tested 50 cats in the area with no new positives reported as of Saturday. Vets are advising owners to watch for signs like coughing or lethargy and report them immediately.
Avian flu has hit over 70 million birds in the U.S. since 2022 with rare mammal cases now emerging. Cats are especially vulnerable due to their hunting habits making urban strays a potential vector. Scientists warn unchecked spread could adapt the virus for broader transmission though evidence is scant.
Public reaction has been mixed with some Brooklyn residents fearing for their pets while others downplay the threat. Animal shelters reported a dip in adoptions as news spread prompting calls for calm from city leaders. The kitten is recovering under quarantine a small win amid rising concern.
Federal agencies are monitoring the situation with the CDC noting only one human case tied to cats since the outbreak began. Still the twin NYC cases have spurred tighter bird control measures in parks and markets. Experts say vigilance not panic is key as data trickles in on feline risks.
This outbreak tests NYC’s ability to manage an unusual zoonotic challenge in a dense pet-loving city. Whether it’s a blip or a harbinger depends on containment efforts now underway. For Brooklyn’s cats and their owners the stakes are personal as health teams work to halt the flu’s quiet creep.
Coverage Details
| Total News Sources | 24 |
| Left | 8 |
| Right | 6 |
| Center | 7 |
| Unrated | 3 |
| Bias Distribution | 33% Left |
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