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Hot on the heels of the recent death of a cat in Oregon due to H5N1 influenza infection linked to a raw diet (that some raw diet proponents are trying to deflect or downplay), we have confirmation of a very similar case in California. Los Angeles County Public Health has issued a notice to avoid feeding Monarch Raw Pet Food “due to detection of H5 bird flu in product samples.” (note the plural). H5N1 was confirmed in one cat that was fed this diet and is suspected in four other cats from the same household.

The diet type was not reported, but the company’s website indicates “Our pet food is made of human grade USDA free-range poultry that is raised in the San Joaquin Valley.” Free range poultry are at increased risk of H5N1 infection from wild birds. Nonetheless, it would be interesting to know how infected poultry made it into the food chain (even the pet food chain), since H5N1 influenza usually causes widespread illness and death in domestic poultry, so it’s pretty obvious when it hits a poultry farm (and sick birds cannot be sent to slaughter).

The status of the infected cat wasn’t reported, but H5N1 infection in cats is often fatal based on what we know to date. Hopefully the cat had a milder infection, but I assume it was at least worse than a routine upper respiratory tract infection, since testing is usually limited to pets that are pretty sick.

The good news is that food-associated H5N1 influenza risks are totally avoidable… just don’t feed pets raw diets. The cost:benefit calculus is pretty easy since this virus kills cats and there are no health benefits of raw diets. More information about raw meat-based diets for pets (beyond the risk of H5N1 flu) can be found in the Worms & Germs / OAHN Raw Meat Diets infosheet, available on the Worms & Germs Resources – Pets page.