Updated
Updated · WBAY · May 19
Wisconsin Reports 17 Salmonella Cases Linked to Backyard Poultry
Updated
Updated · WBAY · May 19

Wisconsin Reports 17 Salmonella Cases Linked to Backyard Poultry

6 articles · Updated · WBAY · May 19
  • Wisconsin has logged 17 salmonella cases so far in 2026, with Winnebago County health officials tying the illnesses to contact with backyard poultry.
  • Health officials said the bacteria can spread through infected animals' feces, contaminated food or water, or by handling chickens, eggs and items in poultry living areas.
  • Symptoms include diarrhea, vomiting, fever and abdominal cramps; most people recover without treatment, but severe diarrhea can require hospitalization.
  • State guidance urges owners to wash hands after contact, avoid kissing or snuggling birds, keep poultry out of homes and not eat or drink around them.
  • The Wisconsin cases come as multistate backyard-poultry outbreaks have sickened 184 people in 31 states, including 21 in Michigan and 4 in Georgia.
With drug-resistant Salmonella now found in backyard birds, could this popular hobby create an untreatable health crisis?
This deadly Salmonella outbreak is linked to ducklings. Why are these popular birds a hidden danger for families?