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Pandemics and Biosecurity
9JUN

Idaho dairy H5N1 breaks five-month US lull

4 min read
09:58UTC

Idaho dairy herds confirmed H5N1 in May, the first US dairy detections since Wisconsin in December, ending a quiet that had begun to read as containment.

ScienceDeveloping
Key takeaway

Idaho's H5N1 detection ends the US dairy lull while CDC's exposure dashboard has been frozen since March.

Idaho dairy herds have tested positive for H5N1, the first confirmed US dairy cattle detections since Wisconsin in December 2025, CIDRAP reported in May 2026 1. The intervening five months had read as a tentative ceiling on the outbreak. CIDRAP frames the new finding as either renewed spread into a state where surveillance had been quiet, or persistent low-level circulation that had escaped earlier sampling. Either reading retires the hypothesis that the dairy reservoir was burning itself out.

Idaho is the third-largest US dairy producer geographically, and its herds sit upstream of slaughter, milk-processing and feed-supply networks that span the Pacific Northwest and reach into California and Washington. The same supply web that delivers fluid milk and cull cows across state lines is the lattice on which a regional outbreak becomes a national one. Wisconsin's December detection sat at the end of an autumn wave; Idaho's sits at the start of the spring milking cycle, when herd movement, calving and tanker traffic all pick up.

PAHO's 11 March update logged 75 cumulative H5N1 human cases across the Americas since 2022, with two deaths, in five countries, and no new human case reported since 24 November 2025 2. CDC's US H5N1 human-case page froze at 71 on 6 March, which means the publicly observable April and May 2026 window is blank rather than negative. Cattle are testing positive in Idaho. The CDC dashboard that would normally indicate whether dairy workers near them are also seropositive has not been updated for nine weeks, leaving the human-exposure window unobserved rather than clean.

The operational question for the next quarter is whether Idaho is the leading edge of a Pacific Northwest spillover or a self-contained pocket. The genetic fingerprint to watch is the 2.3.4.4b B3.13 clade that has driven the dairy outbreak so far. Sequencing data shared through GISAID will determine whether the Idaho herds carry the same lineage as Wisconsin, suggesting persistence, or a new reassortant, suggesting a fresh poultry-to-cattle bridge somewhere along the migratory flyway. Each answer points to a different intervention. Both depend on USDA APHIS and state veterinary services restoring the surveillance cadence that has already slipped.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

H5N1 is the strain of bird flu that has been spreading through US dairy herds since early 2024. By December 2025 it seemed to have quietened down: no new detections in dairy cattle for five months. Idaho's May 2026 finding breaks that assumption. Most of the 71 people who caught this strain of bird flu in the US were dairy workers. Idaho dairy workers now face the same exposure risk that workers in Texas and Wisconsin faced in 2024. US government records of human cases have not been updated since March, so any new cases in the April-May window remain invisible in official counts.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Idaho's dairy industry is structurally interconnected with the broader Pacific Northwest supply chain. Cattle move between herds for breeding, veterinary attention, and auction; milk travels through shared tanker fleets; milking equipment is serviced by itinerant technicians. Each of these movement nodes is a potential fomite pathway for H5N1 transmission between farms, independent of wild-bird incursion.

CDC's human-case page froze at 71 on 6 March, meaning any dairy-worker infections in the April-May window are not reflected in public counts. USDA APHIS moved animal HPAI data to a separate tracker. Two federal agencies maintaining separate, asynchronous data streams for what is functionally one outbreak makes it structurally difficult for state health departments to correlate animal and human detections in real time.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    USDA APHIS will expand mandatory testing requirements to Idaho dairy herds under the existing 2024 Mandatory Testing Order, likely triggering tracing of cattle movement contacts across the Pacific Northwest dairy supply chain.

    Immediate · 0.9
  • Risk

    If Idaho detections precede broader Pacific Northwest spread through May-June, US dairy exports face renewed trade-restriction enquiries from Asian import partners who had conditionally resumed purchases after the apparent December 2025 lull.

    Short term · 0.55
  • Consequence

    The CDC human-case data freeze, now extending more than two months, makes it impossible to assess whether Idaho dairy worker exposure has produced spillover cases; pressure on CDC to resume active reporting will mount if the Idaho outbreak expands.

    Short term · 0.7
First Reported In

Update #1 · Hantavirus comes ashore; H5N1 won't quit

WHO· 7 May 2026
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