For decades, scientists have warned that H5N1 bird flu could one day cross a critical threshold: moving from sporadic animal-to-human infections to sustained human-to-human transmission. A new peer-reviewed modelling study by Ashoka University researchers suggests that if that shift occurs, the margin for stopping an outbreak may be measured in days and single-digit case counts.
The work, led by Philip Cherian and Gautam Menon, uses computer simulations to explore how an H5N1 outbreak might unfold in a community and which early public-health steps could prevent it from escalating. Their findings, published in BMC Public Health, aim to help policymakers think through what “early action” would actually look like in the first uncertain days of a potential spillover event.
Why H5N1 remains on global watchlists
Avian influenza is entrenched across parts of South and South-East Asia and has occasionally infected humans since the virus emerged in China in the late 1990s. From 2003 through August 2025, the World Health Organization (WHO) reported 990 confirmed human H5N1 cases across 25 countries, including 475 deaths—about a 48% fatality rate among reported cases.
In the United States, H5N1 has hit animal populations hard: more than 180 million birds have been affected, the virus has spread to over 1,000 dairy herds across 18 states, and at least 70 people—mostly farmworkers—have been infected, with several hospitalisations and one reported death. India has also seen high-profile animal cases, including the deaths of three tigers and a leopard at a wildlife rescue centre in Nagpur earlier this year.
In humans, symptoms can resemble a severe flu—high fever, cough, sore throat and muscle aches—and may include conjunctivitis. Some infections can be asymptomatic. Public-health agencies continue to describe the current risk to the general public as low, while monitoring for viral changes that could make transmission between people easier.
What the Ashoka University model tried to answer
The central concern is not the first infection—often expected to occur in someone handling poultry, working in live-bird markets, or exposed to infected animals—but what happens next. The danger begins if the virus adapts to enable efficient human-to-human transmission, turning isolated spillovers into chains of infection.
Because early outbreaks are typically marked by incomplete and “messy” data, the researchers used BharatSim, an open-source simulation platform originally developed for Covid-19 modelling. The platform can simulate how infections move through a population based on contact patterns, household structures, and community interactions—allowing researchers to test how different interventions might change the trajectory.
“The threat of an H5N1 pandemic in humans is a genuine one, but we can hope to forestall it through better surveillance and a more nimble public-health response,” Prof Gautam Menon said in comments reported alongside the study.
The key finding: a narrow window before spread becomes hard to trace
The study’s headline message is about timing. The model suggests that once detected cases rise beyond roughly two to 10, the outbreak becomes far more likely to extend beyond the immediate circles of exposure and into the wider community.
To explain that shift, the researchers distinguish between:
- Primary contacts: people with direct, close exposure to an infected person, such as household members, caregivers, or close colleagues.
- Secondary contacts: people who have not met the infected individual but have close interactions with primary contacts.
In the simulation, quarantining households of primary contacts when as few as two cases are detected makes containment “almost certain.” But if authorities only intervene once 10 cases are identified, the model indicates it is “overwhelmingly likely” that transmission has already reached beyond primary and secondary contacts—making the outbreak’s path resemble a scenario with little or no early intervention.
Why the researchers looked to Tamil Nadu’s poultry belt
To keep the modelling grounded in plausible Indian conditions, the researchers selected a single village setting in Namakkal district, Tamil Nadu—widely known as a hub of poultry production. The region has a high density of poultry farms and frequent human-animal interaction, the kinds of conditions where spillover risks are often studied.
The choice matters because models are only as useful as the assumptions that feed them. A rural community with tightly connected households and workplaces will show different outbreak dynamics than a high-rise urban neighbourhood or a commuter-heavy city. By focusing on a specific setting, the study aims to offer more operational insights for local surveillance and response planning.
What “early intervention” could mean in practice
Models do not predict the future; they test scenarios. Still, the study’s results underline a practical challenge: the earliest days of a novel outbreak are the hardest moment to act decisively, because case counts are small and evidence is incomplete.
In that context, the research points to the value of:
- Surveillance that can detect unusual respiratory illness clusters quickly, especially among people with animal exposure.
- Rapid identification and monitoring of close contacts, before transmission chains become diffuse.
- Targeted, time-bound quarantine measures that focus on households and high-risk networks instead of broad restrictions.
- Clear risk communication to reduce delays in reporting symptoms and seeking care.
The study’s message aligns with a broader public-health lesson learned from past outbreaks: once a pathogen spreads beyond traceable contact networks, containment becomes exponentially more difficult and resource-intensive.
What to watch next
H5N1’s current threat to the public remains low, but the virus’s widespread presence in birds and mammals keeps it under close watch. For India and other countries with large poultry sectors, the modelling adds urgency to preparedness efforts that can be activated quickly—before an outbreak crosses the point where early containment is still realistic.
As animal outbreaks continue to occur globally, the study’s core warning is simple: if human transmission ever becomes sustained, the first few detected cases may be the only moment when decisive action can still keep a local event from becoming something much larger.

