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South Korea MOE: 19 Day Avian Flu Drill Fall 2025 - New HPAI in Livestock Drill 9/22

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  • South Korea MOE: 19 Day Avian Flu Drill Fall 2025 - New HPAI in Livestock Drill 9/22

    South Korea MOE: Strengthening the Safety of Field Response Personnel for Avian Influenza in Wild Birds




    #18,861

    With another seasonal surge in HPAI H5 expected in the coming weeks or months, two days ago South Korea's CDC Announced A 19-day, Nationwide, Mock-Training Exercise to Prepare for Zoonotic Influenza.

    Over the past several years we've seen an uptick in avian, mammalian, and human infections - from both clade 2.3.4.4b and 2.3.2.1x viruses - raising concerns over their growing zoonotic potential.


    While no one can truly know how close we might be to an avian flu pandemic, many countries take the risk seriously. A few recent cautionary reports include:


    Today South Korea's Ministry of Environment issued the following statement on new steps (effective starting tomorrow, Sept 4th), to be taken to increase the safety of personnel dealing directly with avian influenza, and to ensure a more coordinated and efficient quarantine response.

    Some of the key points mentioned:

    Enhanced Protection for Personnel
    • Mandatory seasonal flu vaccination for field responders.
    • Use of personal protective equipment (PPE) (gloves, masks, etc.).
    • 10-day health monitoring following culling or handling potentially infected birds, with immediate reporting if symptoms develop.
    New Reporting & Response requirements
    • Streamlined reporting of wild bird disease events to local governments and the National Institute of Wildlife Disease Management.
    • Centralized precision testing at the National Wildlife Disease Control and Prevention Agency for efficiency and expertise.
    Stricter Crisis Management
    • Even in the caution stage, serious measures can be applied if HPAI is detected.
    • Local governments to set up warning signs, disinfection stations, and barriers in outbreak areas.
    • Regional environmental offices to inspect and oversee quarantine compliance.

    The full (translated) news release follows. I'll have a brief postscript after the break.

    Strengthening the safety of field response personnel for avian influenza in wild birds
    Registrant name Hwang Ui-jeong
    Department name Natural Ecology Policy Division
    contact044-201-7491
    Registration date 2025-09-03

    ▷ Revised Standard Action Guidelines for Avian Influenza in Wild Birds for the 2025-2026 Winter Season
    ▷ Safe and effective quarantine response by supplementing human infection prevention guidelines for field response personnel.

    The Ministry of Environment (Minister Kim Sung-hwan) announced that it will revise the 'Wild Bird Avian Influenza Standard Operating Procedure (AI SOP)' to enable safer and more effective responses in the field when avian influenza (AI) occurs in wild birds and distribute it to local governments and other relevant organizations starting September 4.

    This revision focuses on infection prevention for field response personnel and efficient response at quarantine sites, given the potential for avian influenza in wild birds to develop into a zoonotic disease. Recent overseas cases of highly pathogenic avian influenza infecting mammals and humans, and the discovery of avian influenza virus in wild mammals in Korea in March of this year (2025), have led to improvements to existing systemic deficiencies.

    First, these revised guidelines supplement the human infection prevention guidelines that must be followed by avian influenza response personnel, including field investigators and migratory bird surveyors.

    Field response personnel for avian influenza should be vaccinated against seasonal influenza and wear personal protective equipment, including gloves and masks. Those involved in culling should monitor their health for at least 10 days. If clinical symptoms such as fever, muscle pain, or conjunctival congestion appear, they should avoid external contact and report the situation to the health authorities.

    Additionally, the reporting and response system for wild bird diseases has been reorganized. Procedures have been improved to ensure that any carcasses or suspected cases of avian influenza are immediately reported to the local government and the National Institute of Wildlife Disease Management for prompt quarantine measures.

    At the same time, precision testing for avian influenza was centralized at the National Wildlife Disease Control and Prevention Agency to increase testing efficiency and expertise.

    In addition, measures for each institution were clarified so that even in the crisis stage (caution), if highly pathogenic avian influenza occurs, it can be managed in a manner similar to the serious stage.

    Local governments have implemented quarantine measures such as installing warning signs, barriers, and disinfection platforms around outbreak areas, and regional environmental offices have established a systematic management foundation by inspecting the quarantine management status of local governments.


    Meanwhile, the Ministry of Environment has established a legal framework for limited rescue of suspected avian influenza cases at wildlife rescue centers equipped with or receiving support for isolation and containment facilities, such as negative pressure cages*, to prevent the spread of disease.

    Previously, rescues were prohibited within a 500-meter radius of a highly pathogenic avian influenza outbreak, but this revision allows for more flexible and safer rescue activities. The Ministry of Environment plans to conduct a pilot project using negative pressure cages at the South Chungcheong Wildlife Rescue Center this month and, based on the results, consider expanding the use of negative pressure cages.

    * A facility that forms negative pressure inside the cage (with built-in fumigation and disinfection function) to prevent the leakage of air and viruses to the outside, and to isolate and treat suspected infected individuals from general individuals.


    In addition, quarantine compliance management will be strengthened in conjunction with the revised "Act on the Management of Zoos and Aquariums" and the licensing system for breeding and exhibition facilities. For public facilities like Seoul Grand Park, the regional environmental office will be responsible for inspecting the implementation of the "Avian Influenza Quarantine Management Plan," while for private facilities, local governments will be responsible for inspecting the implementation of the plan. This will enhance the effectiveness of the system.

    Kim Tae-oh, Director of the Ministry of Environment’s Nature Conservation Bureau, said, “This revision will enable field response personnel to avian influenza to respond systematically and safely,” and added, “Starting with the coming winter season, we will reflect this revision to strengthen quarantine measures and closely cooperate with related organizations such as the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs and the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency to effectively block and respond to the occurrence and spread of avian influenza, including through rapid information sharing.”

    (Continue . . . )

    While we've seen similar recommendations from the USDA and the CDC - which are primarily advisory agencies - meaning that many of their guidelines are non-binding (see MMWR: PPE Use by Dairy Farm workers Exposed to Cows Infected with HPAI A(H5N1) Viruses — Colorado, 2024)..


    South Korea's MOE, MAFRA, and CDC all have considerably more regulatory clout, making these requirements more likely to be enforced.

    While South Korea isn't alone in addressing the threat (see Taiwan APHIA Launches "Strengthening Autumn and Winter Avian Influenza Prevention Measures"), the reality is, most of the world continues to watch, wait, and hope.


    The $64 question this fall - as it has been for several years - is in what form will HPAI H5 return (see H5Nx: Reassort & Repeat). While an attenuation of the avian flu threat is always possible, in recent years the trajectory has been towards greater diversity, and increased zoonotic risks.

    And it is not as if HPAI H5 is the only pandemic threat out there. It has plenty of company, and the only thing we can be sure of is that another pandemic is inevitable.


    The only thing we can really control is whether we'll be prepared for it when it comes.

    https://afludiary.blogspot.com/2025/...safety-of.html
    Last edited by Michael Coston; Yesterday, 06:01 AM.
    All medical discussions are for educational purposes. I am not a doctor, just a retired paramedic. Nothing I post should be construed as specific medical advice. If you have a medical problem, see your physician.

  • #2
    South Korea: MAFRA Conducts A Preemptive Virtual Quarantine Exercise (CPX) to Prepare for an Outbreak of Avian Influenza (AI)


    Major Global Migratory Flyways – Credit FAO


    #18,881

    Last year saw the emergence of several unique North American H5N1 genotypes (B3.13 in the spring, and D.1, D.2, and D.3 in the fall) - which in addition to infecting millions of wild birds and poultry - have gone on to infect hundreds of dairy herds (B3.13 and D.1) caused at least one spillover into pigs (D.2), and have infected hundreds of other mammals in the United States.

    Both B3.13 and D.1/D.x genotypes have also infected humans (n=70), with B3.13 infections tending to be minor, while D.1 has produced several severe illnesses and one fatality.

    Until now, this has been viewed by the rest of the world as a `North American' problem - as so far - these aggressive genotypes have been limited to the United States and Canada.

    But the global dynamics of avian flu often shift following the summer roosting season, where hundreds of millions of migratory birds spend a few months in Alaska, Siberia, Northern Canada and the Arctic before returning in the fall.

    There, they often share viruses, which sometimes generate new genotypes or subtypes (see Sci Repts.: Southward Autumn Migration Of Waterfowl Facilitates Transmission Of HPAI H5N1).

    This annual avian `mass gathering event' is an ideal way for these North American viruses to be spread to birds that may head to Asia or Europe this fall. Which means that what happens in North America doesn't necessarily stay in North America.

    While there are no guarantees that B3.13 or D1.x will spread globally - or even return to North America this fall - the world must be ready for surprises (see H5Nx: Reassort & Repeat).

    South Korea has been aggressively preparing for the avian flu threat over the past year, releasing a new pandemic plan last summer, and 3 weeks ago announcing a a 19-day, Nationwide, Mock-Training Exercise to Prepare for Zoonotic Influenza.

    Today South Korea's MAFRA (Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs) released the following press release on a major exercise to prepare for a spillover of avian influenza into livestock.

    First today's announcement, after which I'll have a bit more.

    (translated)

    The Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs conducted a preemptive virtual quarantine exercise (CPX) to prepare for an outbreak of avian influenza (AI).

    2025.09.22 16:00:00 Foot-and-Mouth Disease Prevention Division, Quarantine Policy Bureau

    The Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs ( Minister Song Mee-ryeong , hereinafter referred to as the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs ) conducted the “ 2025 Mammalian Avian Influenza Disaster Response Virtual Quarantine Training” on September 22 in Yeongyang-gun, Gyeongsangbuk-do.

    The training was jointly hosted by the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs, Gyeongsangbuk-do Province, and Yeongyang-gun, and was attended by about 100 people from related organizations such as the Ministry of Environment , the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency , the Animal and Plant Quarantine Agency, the Livestock Quarantine Support Center , and the National Agricultural Cooperative Federation .

    This training was conducted as a virtual quarantine training with the possibility of the virus entering domestic dairy farms in mind, as the damage has spread since the first outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza in dairy cows in Texas, USA in March 2024 , with outbreaks occurring in 973 farms across 17 states .


    The Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs preemptively inspected the crisis management response capabilities and inter-agency cooperation systems of each institution according to the Emergency Action Guidelines (SOP) at each stage* during the process of rapid situation assessment (confirmation of occurrence/damage) and quarantine measures ( response measures and recovery/restoration) in the event of an outbreak, focusing on the revised 「Emergency Action Guidelines ( SOP ) for Mammalian Avian Influenza 」this year .
    ( Step 1 ) Detection of highly pathogenic AI in wild cats
    ( Step 2 ) Occurrence of suspected AI in dairy cattle
    ( Step 3 ) Confirmation of highly pathogenic AI in dairy cattle
    The Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs expects that this virtual training will strengthen the mammalian avian influenza response capabilities of all participating organizations , and plans to immediately improve any shortcomings discovered during this training .

    Choi Jeong-rok, Director of the Quarantine Policy Bureau at the Ministry of Agriculture , Food and Rural Affairs, who hosted this training , said , “ This virtual quarantine training for mammalian avian influenza disaster response was the first training conducted since the establishment of the Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) , but it was a good opportunity to once again check the roles of related organizations, local governments, and participating organizations . ”

    He added , “ I expect that each organization’s quarantine awareness and initial response capabilities will improve, and we will continue to continuously review our response system for disasters according to the situation that reflects the outbreak patterns of mammalian avian influenza . ”

    Attached is the 2025 Mammalian Avian Influenza Disaster Response Virtual Quarantine Training Plan.

    As recently as 8 months ago, the only H5N1 genotype thought likely to infect cattle was B3.13. But last February, we saw dairy herds in two different states infected with genotype D.1.

    Since then both the UK and Norway have reported H5N1 infections in sheep from European strains of the virus (see EM&I: Detection of Clade 2.3.4.4b H5N1 High Pathogenicity Avian Influenza Virus in a Sheep in Great Britain, 2025), and last year we saw serological evidence of HPAI H5 virus exposure in goats and sheep from Pakistan.

    All of which makes exercises like today's in South Korea not only prudent, but essential, since we can't depend upon HPAI H5Nx to always act tomorrow the way it has acted in the past.


    Major Global Migratory Flyways – Credit FAO #18,881 Last year saw the emergence of several unique North American H5N1 genotypes ( B3.13 in ...

    All medical discussions are for educational purposes. I am not a doctor, just a retired paramedic. Nothing I post should be construed as specific medical advice. If you have a medical problem, see your physician.

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