Poultry Keepers Warned to be Prepared for Avian Flu

Joint statement, the UK’s four Chief Veterinary Officers

“Avian flu is a continued threat to all poultry keepers, and as winter approaches we need to be ready for the increased risk of disease that migrating birds pose to our flocks.

“We encourage keepers across the UK to implement strong biosecurity practices now, including regular shed maintenance checks, cleaning and disinfecting footwear and signing up for our email and text alerts. Making these tasks a regular fixture of your disease control plans now will make a significant difference in the fight against avian flu this winter and for years to come.”

There are several measures that can help to keep flocks disease free. All keepers – whether they run a large commercial farm or keep just a few pet chickens in their back garden – can get ahead of the game and take these steps to reduce the risk of disease before the migration of wild birds begins again this winter:

  • Keep the area where birds live clean and tidy, control rats and mice and regularly clean and disinfect any hard surfaces
  • Keep chickens and turkeys completely separate from ducks and geese
  • Conduct regular maintenance checks on their sheds
  • Clean moss off the roofs, empty gutters and remove vegetation between sheds where birds are kept
  • Draw up contingency plans for storing bedding and dealing with pests
  • Place birds’ feed and water in fully enclosed areas that are protected from wild birds, and remove any spilled feed regularly
  • Put fencing around outdoor areas where birds are allowed and limit their access to ponds or areas visited by wild waterfowl
  • Clean and disinfect footwear before and after entering premises where birds are kept
  • Ensure robust contingency and business continuity plans are developed and reviewed for managing your premises in the event of avian flu – including for housing birds, appropriate arrangements for bedding management, vermin and pest control
  • Ensure production records – including for farm movements, water intake and egg production – are up-to-date, easily accessible and preferably electronic
  • Be ready to submit licensing requests for when planning to move birds, vehicles or feed, and have plans in place in case of delays

The Scottish Government continues to monitor for incursions of avian flu and is working with the poultry and game bird industries; hen rehoming and pure and traditional poultry breeds stakeholders to help reduce the risk of disease.

Avian influenza (bird flu): how to spot and report the disease

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  1. Isn’t it crazy how authorities put more efforts and more stringent measures in containing an animal disease whilst letting the human pandemic roam free in this country?
    Well, avian disease means economic losses whereas Covid ‘just’ means human loss of life, the latter a price the government appears to accept far more relaxed.

    Given that avian flu has been present throughout the year in many other Euopean countries, we had made the decision that we would keep our handful of chicken inside this year completely as a precaution, despite that it would have been legal to let them out.
    Luckily, they have their own spacious barn with windows and light and lots of space, but I am keeping my fingers crossed that 2022 they will not again have to endure a year without the freedom to sunbathe in the garden.

    Had the government adopted similarly stringent measures to contain Covid, we wouldn’t still have the highest infection rates across Europe…
    Scotland’s daily death toll today is higher than what New Zealand has recorded in total since the pandemic began.

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