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Pandemics and Biosecurity
7MAY

Idaho dairy H5N1: 1 to 59 herds in twelve days

4 min read
15:24UTC

South Central Idaho's dairy H5N1 tally reached 59 quarantined herds and 86 individual cattle confirmations across four counties by 12 May, up from a single confirmed herd on 1 May, making Idaho the second-highest state nationally. H5N1 was also confirmed in domestic cats in Washington and Oregon, and alpacas in Idaho.

ScienceDeveloping
Key takeaway

Idaho's 59-fold herd surge in twelve days, with cats and alpacas now positive, is the outbreak's fastest state-level escalation.

South Central Idaho recorded 59 quarantined dairy herds and 86 individual cattle confirmations across four counties by 12 May , compared with one confirmed herd twelve days earlier. 1 The national US dairy total crossed 1,047 confirmed cases across 17 states since the outbreak began in March 2024. Idaho moved in twelve days to second place nationally behind California, which has led cumulative totals throughout.

In the same period, H5N1 was confirmed in domestic cats in Washington (King and Snohomish counties) and Oregon, and in alpacas in Idaho. The mammalian host list now spans dairy cattle, domestic cats, and camelids. Domestic cats are not milked; their route to infection is more likely rodent prey or raw milk consumption, and they spend more time in household environments than dairy cows. The alpaca confirmations inside Idaho reinforce that transmission is happening across species sharing farm premises rather than confining itself to the dairy production chain.

The CDC human case counter remained at 71 cases since 6 March. The NIH/NIAID nasal epithelium study published on 12 May in CDC Emerging Infectious Diseases identifies the likely partial explanation: 66% of exposed dairy workers carry pre-existing pdm09 H1N1 cross-immunity. The four human H5N1 cases confirmed across Asia by February were all tied to poultry contact, not dairy cattle , underscoring that the livestock-to-human transmission pathway remains less well-characterised than the avian route.

The only concurrent defensive advance against this expanding picture is the CEPI and Moderna Phase 3 mRNA H5N1 vaccine trial that began on 22 April . A Phase 3 trial measures efficacy, not production capacity; regulatory approval and deployment at scale would take years beyond trial completion. The surveillance contraction and the outbreak geography are both moving faster than any defensive countermeasure.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Idaho's dairy farming region is a dense web of farms that share workers, equipment, and cattle. When **H5N1** bird flu arrived in one herd on 1 May 2026, it spread quickly to neighbouring operations before health officials could identify which herds were infected and quarantine them. By 12 May, 59 herds across four nearby counties had been locked down. The same virus also turned up in pet cats in Washington and Oregon states, and in alpacas in Idaho. Cats likely caught it by eating infected raw milk or carcasses; alpacas may have been exposed through shared water or pasture near dairy farms. The **CEPI/Moderna** vaccine trial that started in April {{EVREF:/t/pandemics-and-biosecurity/1/moderna-begins-phase-3-h5n1-mrna-trial/}} is the main defensive development running in parallel, though that trial will take months before it produces safety and efficacy data.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

South Central Idaho's four-county concentration reflects the structural geography of large-scale dairy in the Pacific Northwest: feedlot-scale operations share the same veterinary services, the same labour pool, and the same cattle trading networks. A single introduction into one herd propagates through those shared contacts before quarantine severs the links.

The timing also reflects a detection lag: USDA's bulk-milk surveillance identifies infected herds only after bulk-tank samples have been pooled and processed, a cycle that typically takes 5-10 days. Idaho cattle that moved interstate before 1 May may have arrived already infected but undetected, seeding operations that only became visible in bulk-milk results during the first two weeks of May.

The species jump to domestic cats and alpacas reflects a third distinct mechanism: cats that consumed raw milk or carcasses from infected cows, and alpacas sharing pasture and water sources with adjacent dairy operations. Neither pathway requires direct herd-to-herd cattle contact, meaning quarantine of dairy herds does not prevent further mammalian spillover.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Domestic cat H5N1 cases in Washington and Oregon create a new human-proximate exposure pathway; cats shed virus in saliva, urine, and faeces, which human household members can encounter without occupational exposure.

    Immediate · 0.7
  • Consequence

    The widening mammalian host range from dairy cattle to cats, alpacas, and previously confirmed wild mammals increases the probability that USDA's herd quarantine model alone cannot contain the outbreak without a broader One Health response.

    Short term · 0.68
  • Risk

    If Idaho cattle moved to new states between 1 May (testing rollback) and 12 May (quarantine enforcement), up to several weeks of lag time may exist before seeded infections in receiving states appear in bulk-milk surveillance.

    Short term · 0.72
First Reported In

Update #2 · B3.13 gets better at humans as testing ends

CDC· 12 May 2026
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