While the virus was found in milk, Khabbaza tells PEOPLE that “pasteurized milk is going to be safe and also cooked eggs. In ...
But the leap of the H5N1 influenza strain, widespread among wild fowl and a regular threat to domestic poultry, into cattle ...
If it's true that you are what you eat, then most beef-eating Americans consist of a smattering of poultry feathers, urine, ...
Scientists are monitoring the spread of bird flu in dairy cattle and other mammals to see how the virus is changing. So far, there are no alarming signs that it poses a new risk to humans.
Should people be worried? Pasteurization and the H5N1 virus’s route to infection suggests risks to people remains low.
Public health officials are continuing to monitor as an outbreak of avian flu, also known as bird flu, continues to spread ...
The FDA said Tuesday that fragments of the virus that causes bird flu had been found in samples of pasteurized milk, but said ...
Bird flu virus has been detected in raw milk, federal agencies reported this week, but added that the nation's commercial ...
In the ever-evolving landscape of food safety, a new challenge has emerged – an outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza ...
A study on the preprint server bioRxiv details the deaths of 10 of 15 bush dogs from H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza A ...
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (WOOD) — The Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development has confirmed three more outbreaks ...
The FDA said that it does not think it is likely that the particles would able to infect people but it is conducting ...