Health officials have detected fragments of a bird flu virus in milk. What does that mean for the milk supply?
Genomic analysis suggests that the outbreak probably began in December or January, but a shortage of data is hampering ...
The Food and Drug Administration says the milk supply is safe because traces of the bird flu virus found in pasteurized milk ...
The early results suggest that pasteurization is killing the H5N1 virus in milk, something that regulators were not certain ...
The U.S. Department of Agriculture found bird flu in northeast Colorado dairy cows this week, according to state officials.
As the US grapples with an ongoing bird flu outbreak in dairy cattle, the country’s health agencies are ramping up ...
Studies have found fragments of bird flu virus in about 20% of the milk supply. It's not expected to pose a threat to humans, but may indicate the outbreak is more widespread than previously thought.
Why is H5N1, or bird flu, a concern, how does it spread, and is there a vaccine? Here are the answers to some frequently ...
With H5N1 avian influenza causing unprecedented outbreaks in mammals around the world -- including U.S. dairy cattle -- ...
The FDA stressed that the nation's milk supply is safe to drink because pasteurization kills the virus, though it does not ...
So far, there is only one confirmed human case. Rick Bright, an expert on the H5N1 virus who served on President Biden’s ...
Currently, more than two dozen herds have been infected with highly pathogenic avian influenza (also known as bird flu), and ...