Changeflow GovPing Labor & Employment Bird Flu Prevention Guidance for Maryland Workers
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Bird Flu Prevention Guidance for Maryland Workers

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Summary

The Maryland Occupational Safety and Health Administration (MOSH) published a resource page consolidating guidance on avian influenza (bird flu) prevention for Maryland workers. The page describes how bird flu spreads from infected birds to humans through direct contact, contaminated environments, or intermediate animal hosts, and links to federal resources from OSHA, CDC, USDA, and other agencies covering worker protection, PPE, and outbreak response.

Published by MD OSHA on labor.maryland.gov . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

About this source

GovPing monitors MD OSHA (MOSH) News for new labor & employment regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 3 changes logged to date.

What changed

MOSH published a resource page providing background information on avian influenza A (H5N1) and linking to existing federal guidance documents from OSHA, CDC, and USDA covering poultry worker safety, respiratory protection, PPE, and avian influenza control activities.

Maryland employers whose workers handle poultry, livestock, or respond to avian disease outbreaks should review the linked OSHA and CDC resources to ensure their existing safety protocols address bird flu exposure risks, including the use of appropriate PPE and respiratory protection when contact with infected birds or contaminated environments is possible.

Archived snapshot

Apr 22, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

Avian Influenza (Bird Flu) - MOSH

CDC updates its bird flu guidance to cover more workers

Avian influenza A, commonly known as "bird flu," is a contagious viral infection that affects both domestic and wild birds. Its viruses may be transmitted from infected birds to other animals, and potentially to humans. Infection can occur directly from infected birds or contaminated environments, or through an intermediate host like another animal. Close contact with infected birds or their secretions (saliva, mucous, feces) increases the risk for humans. Though rare, human infections can happen if enough virus enters the eyes, nose, and mouth, or is inhaled. Infection through an intermediate host is less common but possible, as influenza A viruses can mix genes and create new strains from different species.

For more detailed information, explore resources from the links below:

Additional Resources:

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
MD OSHA
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Employers Agricultural firms
Industry sector
1120 Animal Production
Activity scope
Worker safety guidance Disease prevention resources
Geographic scope
US-MD US-MD

Taxonomy

Primary area
Occupational Safety
Operational domain
Compliance
Compliance frameworks
OSHA
Topics
Public Health Healthcare

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