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Spain: Andalucia is monitoring 4-5 people after ‘unprecedented’ outbreak in dead birds at Parquet del Tamarguillo in Sevilla - Update: Tested Negative

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  • Spain: Andalucia is monitoring 4-5 people after ‘unprecedented’ outbreak in dead birds at Parquet del Tamarguillo in Sevilla - Update: Tested Negative

    [Andalusia is a large autonomous region of hills, rivers and farmland bordering Spain’s southern coast.​]
    Media

    September 3, 2025
    Avian flu latest: Andalucia is monitoring people after ‘unprecedented’ outbreak

    Health officials in Andalucia are monitoring a small number of people after the discovery of avian flu among dead birds at Parque del Tamarguillo in Sevilla.


    Speaking on Onda Cero, the region’s Director General of Public Health, Manuel Fernandez Zurbaran, confirmed that between four and five people are under surveillance, though not all require follow-up.

    ‘The final list is still being worked on,’ he said.


    The human surveillance protocol has three phases. First, anyone who may have been exposed to sick birds or contaminated environments is identified, assessed and monitored for 10 days.

    During that time, they are asked to watch for symptoms such as fever, wear a mask if they appear, and alert public health services for medical referral.


    Second, even if no symptoms develop, a PCR test is carried out on day five after exposure to rule out infection.

    Finally, anyone who arrives at a health centre with flu-like symptoms and reports prior contact with infected birds or samples is treated as a suspected case. Advice for the public


    Fernandez issued a set of precautionary guidelines for residents:
    • Do not feed urban birds in parks or on the street.
    • Maintain good hand hygiene.
    • Do not touch or handle dead birds found in public areas.
    • Notify the council if you spot a dead bird.
    • Get the seasonal flu vaccine if you are in a recommended risk group.

    He stressed that the risk to the general population remains very low, though caution is needed to minimise risks. An ‘unprecedented’ outbreak for Sevilla city

    The Tamarguillo outbreak marks a first significant urban incident of avian flu in the city.

    While the province of Sevilla has seen outbreaks before – with 22 confirmed cases in poultry farms between 2021 and 2022, mainly turkeys and chickens – it has never before struck wildlife in the heart of the capital.

    According to Spain’s Ministry of Health, most human infections worldwide have been isolated cases involving people in direct, unprotected contact with sick animals or contaminated areas.

    Crucially, no sustained human-to-human transmission has ever been documented. The ministry’s most recent report, dated 15 July 2025, continues to classify the risk to the public as ‘very low’, rising only to ‘low’ for those in direct occupational exposure.

    Health officials in Andalucia are monitoring a small number of people after the discovery of avian flu among dead birds at Parque del Tamarguillo in Sevilla

    Last edited by Commonground; September 7, 2025, 12:50 PM.

  • #2
    [translated]
    Health examines people exposed to birds with avian flu from Tamarguillo (Seville), so far without symptoms.

    SEVILLA 4 Sep. (EUROPA PRESS) -

    ​The Seville City Council has sent to the Territorial Delegation of the Andalusian Health Service (SAS), at the request of this agency, a list of people who have been in contact with birds infected with avian flu in Tamarguillo Park, an outbreak that has caused the death of approximately 70 geese and ducks. They are currently being evaluated and awaiting results, although "they have not shown symptoms."

    continued: https://www.europapress.es/andalucia...904132050.html

    Comment


    • #3
      From Post #1:
      Speaking on Onda Cero, the region’s Director General of Public Health, Manuel Fernandez Zurbaran, confirmed that between four and five people are under surveillance, though not all require follow-up.

      ‘The final list is still being worked on,’ he said.​
      [translated]
      September 4, 2025
      Excerpt:

      The Seville City Council today decreed the preventive closure of the gardens of the Royal Alcázar and Miraflores Park after dead ducks were found in both locations. In addition, the Ministry of Health is assessing 25 people due to the outbreak of avian flu in Tamarguillo Park, but not all have had high-risk contact. Those who have not had contact will be ruled out, and all those who have had such contact will be monitored.

      ... https://www.diariodesevilla.es/sevil...004695939.html

      Comment


      • #4
        translated
        6 de septiembre​

        PCR tests on people monitored for the outbreak of avian flu in a park in Seville have come back negative.

        The Andalusian Regional Government is finalizing a coordination protocol with municipalities in response to outbreaks of avian influenza.
        -snip-

        Avian Flu Surveillance in Humans

        After the city council or farm owner identifies potential contacts, the Health Department assesses each case and monitors the individuals exposed to these birds or contaminated environments for 10 days, monitoring for possible symptoms and the onset of fever.

        In parallel (even when symptoms do not appear), five days after exposure, the Health Department performs a specific PCR test to determine if the virus is present in these individuals. So far, since the avian influenza outbreak in Seville's Tamarguillo Park was confirmed, 10 PCR tests have been performed on humans, all with negative results.​

        ​​​​​​​continued:

        Comment


        • #5
          translated
          September 7, 2025

          The Board will monitor park workers if any bird flu infections are confirmed
          It is recommended that workers who present compatible symptoms go to their health center and remember that contagion is rare between birds and humans.

          Málaga: While waiting to know the results regarding the cause of the death of birds at Huelin Park in the capital of Málaga, the Regional Government of Andalusia recommends that workers who have been in contact with birds and have symptoms compatible with avian flu receive care to determine if that is indeed the cause of their illness.
          This is the response from the Director of Public Health of the Regional Government of Andalusia, Manuel Fernández Zurbarán, in statements to this radio station after learning of the complaint from workers at the company that is in charge of maintaining the Málaga parks about the existence of symptoms compatible with avian flu in some of them. If the results are positive, Zurbarán assures, the protocol would be activated: "Anyone who presents symptoms compatible with the flu and who has been exposed to birds should consult their health center, who will contact our epidemiology services, and we will then activate the protocol for cases of influenza in humans."​

          -snip-
          We await the first results that will guide us toward an outbreak of avian influence in birds to launch our protocol for human surveillance."

          Comment


          • #6
            Translation
            No one in contact with the contaminated birds in Seville has been infected.
            All PCR tests have been negative, according to the Ministry of Health.​

            08 de septiembre 2025

            Excerpt:

            Several outbreaks of avian flu have already been detected in Andalusia, Seville, Malaga, and the Doñana area. "We are monitoring 25 people who have been in contact with dead birds, and we are explaining the symptoms they should watch for," the minister stated. As part of this monitoring, those being monitored undergo a PCR test "five days later. So far, all the PCR samples have been negative," the minister explained.

            Comment


            • #7
              Post 12:
              Avian flu reaches the gates of Doñana: confirmed...

              05 SEPT 2025
              New outbreak of avian flu detected in Andalusia. The Ministry of Agriculture has formally reported the existence of a new outbreak in the province of Seville, in the Doñana Natural Park, within the municipality of Aznalcázar....

              In this case, according to the Andalusian Regional Government's Department of Sustainability and Environment, it is an isolated specimen of a great crested grebe found dead on August 28th in the Caño del Guadiamar area within the Doñana Natural Area. It was found and collected by environmental officers. The samples were sent to the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Food on the 29th, and official confirmation of the positive result was received this Friday.​
              Translated
              Avian flu spreads across Andalusia: the regional government activates the protocol in Doñana after detecting three new outbreaks
              Sep 8, 2025

              Excerpts:
              The Andalusian Regional Government has activated level two of its prevention protocol for the risk of avian influenza in wild birds in the Doñana Natural Area after the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Food (MAPA) confirmed three active outbreaks with four specimens testing positive for the H5N1 serotype.

              According to a statement issued this Monday by the Ministry of Sustainability and Environment, this protocol applies to live or dead birds from provinces with declared outbreaks, in this case three in different locations in the Doñana Natural Area.
              The Regional Government had already confirmed an outbreak in the municipality of Aznalcázar (Seville), where a dead grebe presenting the pathogen was found last week, although the MAPA Veterinary Health Alert Network has reported two more.​
              -snip-
              Following these three new outbreaks, Hernández wanted to convey a "message of reassurance," since, she explained, "it is very unlikely that avian flu will be transmitted to humans; in fact, no cases have been detected in people." In fact, the Regional Minister of Health and Consumer Affairs of the Andalusian Regional Government, Rocío Hernández, explained that all PCR tests performed on people being monitored for their contact with birds affected by avian flu have come back negative.


              Comment


              • #8
                I moved some bird outbreak posts to the 2025 thread here. We separate human and animal cases. All of the humans in Spain who have had contact with sick/dead avian flu birds have tested negative so far.

                Comment


                • #9
                  translated
                  11/09/2025

                  The Health Minister rules out the transmission of avian flu to humans in Parliament.​​​​​​

                  Excerpt
                  In a recent parliamentary intervention, Rocío Hernández, Andalusia's Health and Consumer Affairs Minister, reiterated the improbability of avian flu affecting humans. During her speech, she stated that it is "very unlikely" that the virus will be transmitted to people, citing the negative results of all PCR tests conducted so far.
                  -snip-

                  The regional government has implemented a protocol in collaboration with local authorities, especially after detecting the virus in urban and peri-urban areas. Hernández emphasized the importance of clinical surveillance for people who have been in contact with dead birds, who are monitored and informed about symptoms to watch for. Five days after contact, they are given PCR tests, all of which have been negative to date.

                  continued: https://www.democrata.es/andalucia/c...aviar-humanos/

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    translated
                    11 de septiembre 2025​

                    The Health Minister downplays the alarm over bird flu cases: "It's highly unlikely it will spread to people."

                    The Regional Minister of Health downplays the alarm over avian flu cases: "It is very unlikely that it will spread to people." Rocío Hernández emphasizes coordination with the Ministry and two other ministries... The Regional Minister of Health of the Andalusian Regional Government, Rocío Hernández, has downplayed the alarm that may have been triggered by the appearance of birds killed by the avian flu virus and assured the Andalusian Parliament this Thursday of the low probability of the disease developing in humans.

                    "There have been outbreaks for many years and it has never been transmitted to people," the Minister explained in the plenary session of Parliament, seeking to convey a message of "calm." "It is very unlikely that avian flu will spread to people," she insisted before reporting that "there are no detected cases or cases of transmission to the food chain by infected birds," she said, referring to the possible fear among citizens about eating poultry or other poultry products.​

                    Comment


                    • sharon sanders
                      sharon sanders commented
                      Editing a comment
                      It can be transmitted to people via air, touch, and consumption of infected poultry meat. If a true quote - this minister is lying. She is possibly a danger to public safety.

                  • #11
                    [translatedd]
                    17/09/2025

                    Andalusia confirms 12 days without outbreaks of avian flu and censures the PSOE and Vox for their stance on bluetongue

                    The Andalusian government maintained that no new outbreaks of avian flu have been detected in the last twelve days, during a briefing on the current animal health crises. At the same time, it criticized the PSOE (Spanish Socialist Workers' Party) and Vox (Spanish Vox) for attempting to gain political advantage from the bluetongue crisis, calling their actions "despicable" given the difficult situation facing livestock farmers.

                    The Regional Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries, Food, and Rural Development, Ramón Fernández-Pacheco, conveyed a message of calm to both the population and the livestock sector, emphasizing the low probability of avian flu transmission to humans. "All have tested negative," he emphasized regarding the PCR tests performed on individuals exposed to the virus. Fernández-Pacheco also noted that since 2020, no human cases of avian flu have been recorded in Spain, and never in Andalusia.​

                    continued: https://www.democrata.es/agricultura...r-lengua-azul/

                    Comment

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