- Thread starter
- #11
ElGoose
Songster
- May 27, 2023
- 212
- 435
- 146
I’ll have a look into it thank youIt’s pointless logic, if public safety were their concern, well people have much more contact with their backyard flocks compared to commercial poultry or wild birds, so for the public’s safety it would be in everyone’s best interest to vaccinate backyard poultry…..but as usual special interest doesn’t actually care.
Vaccination is the best treatment of bird flu through prevention, however I remember reading one study out of Europe that found promising results in administering oseltamivir “tamiflu” in conjunction with a corticosteroid, like prednisone or dexamethasone at the first signs of illness or suspected infection and administered throughout the duration of illness.
Basically it’s the same principle of how people with severe immune responses to viruses like Covid or bird flu are treated: corticosteroids to stop the body from producing more cytokines and nuking the person’s organs while the antiviral works on killing the virus.
Once upon a time tamiflu was sold over the counter here in the U.S but thanks to people clearing shelves of it during the swine flu outbreak in the early 2000s it became prescription only. If you can get it over the counter where you are it’s something to have around.


It’s really hard to find any kind of poultry care products in the uk for some reason, a lot of it is vet prescription only provided you’re lucky enough to have a vet that stocks it lol
Because of where I live it’s hard to prevent wild birds from getting into the smaller garden space or pooping in it, I try my best to hose down the grass so that it doesn’t fester
I wish people out there would see things from the point of view of people who love their poultry birds , everyone brushes off uk avian influenza until it hits their location - then suddenly they realise how harsh they can be.
Even now on this post I’m being told to get a grip, they fail to realise that the affected zone is right around where I live and that my birds are genuinely at risk. they’ve already started culling many wild geese on the premises. They seem to think that they’re testing each individual bird before culling… nope lol.
If just a few has tested positive, they’ll kill all that might have been in contact with them.