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New strain of bird flu infections found in Nevada herds of dairy cattle; 1st time in US
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:19 am
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:19 am
Crank it up ...
A second kind of bird flu has been detected for the first time in U.S. dairy cattle.
The strain was found in several herds in Nevada, the U.S. Department of Agriculture reported Wednesday.
The herds were in Nye and Churchill counties and were quarantined, according to the Nevada Department of Agriculture.
The strain, which is genotype D1.1 of the H5N1 bird flu, was confirmed Jan. 31, the USDA said. It was found in milk as part of a national surveillance program that started in December.
D1.1 is a genotype that was found during the fall and winter in wild birds, mammals and domestic poultry.
The risk to public health is low, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Previous bird flu found in U.S. dairy cattle have been associated with genotype B3.13, which the CDC said has infected 959 of the nation's dairy herds as of Thursday.
The USDA said it was continuing to work with the Nevada Department of Agriculture to better understand the D1.1 strain and how to limit its spread.
Bird flu can be transmitted from infected birds to other animals and potentially humans directly from the birds, virus-contaminated environments or an infected animal, according to the CDC.
Pasteurized milk, which is the kind typically sold in stores and consumed in the U.S., does not transmit the virus to humans, according to federal agencies. The CDC, the Food and Drug Administration, and the USDA have warned consumers against drinking raw milk.
The bird flu outbreak, which has hit wild birds, poultry and dairy cattle and ignited a hike in egg prices, started in 2022. Since then, all 50 states have reported infections, according to Newsweek.
Since April 2024, the CDC has confirmed genotype B3.13 infections in 67 people in the U.S.
There has been one human death in the U.S. The genotype in that infection was D1.1, according to a CDC report.
The person. whose death was reported Jan. 6 was a Louisiana patient over 65 with underlying medical conditions, according to the state’s Department of Health. The department said the patient contracted H5N1 after being exposed to a mix of non-commercial backyard flock and wild birds.
As of Thursday, more than 156 million poultry have been found to be infected in the U.S., the CDC reported. As of Wednesday, infections have been found in 11,627 wild birds.
...
A second kind of bird flu has been detected for the first time in U.S. dairy cattle.
The strain was found in several herds in Nevada, the U.S. Department of Agriculture reported Wednesday.
The herds were in Nye and Churchill counties and were quarantined, according to the Nevada Department of Agriculture.
The strain, which is genotype D1.1 of the H5N1 bird flu, was confirmed Jan. 31, the USDA said. It was found in milk as part of a national surveillance program that started in December.
D1.1 is a genotype that was found during the fall and winter in wild birds, mammals and domestic poultry.
The risk to public health is low, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Previous bird flu found in U.S. dairy cattle have been associated with genotype B3.13, which the CDC said has infected 959 of the nation's dairy herds as of Thursday.
The USDA said it was continuing to work with the Nevada Department of Agriculture to better understand the D1.1 strain and how to limit its spread.
Bird flu can be transmitted from infected birds to other animals and potentially humans directly from the birds, virus-contaminated environments or an infected animal, according to the CDC.
Pasteurized milk, which is the kind typically sold in stores and consumed in the U.S., does not transmit the virus to humans, according to federal agencies. The CDC, the Food and Drug Administration, and the USDA have warned consumers against drinking raw milk.
The bird flu outbreak, which has hit wild birds, poultry and dairy cattle and ignited a hike in egg prices, started in 2022. Since then, all 50 states have reported infections, according to Newsweek.
Since April 2024, the CDC has confirmed genotype B3.13 infections in 67 people in the U.S.
There has been one human death in the U.S. The genotype in that infection was D1.1, according to a CDC report.
The person. whose death was reported Jan. 6 was a Louisiana patient over 65 with underlying medical conditions, according to the state’s Department of Health. The department said the patient contracted H5N1 after being exposed to a mix of non-commercial backyard flock and wild birds.
As of Thursday, more than 156 million poultry have been found to be infected in the U.S., the CDC reported. As of Wednesday, infections have been found in 11,627 wild birds.
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If tweet fails to load, click here. Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:20 am to Night Vision
So i guess the usda is going to euthanize a shitloat of milk cows to try to get the price to double for some negative Trump press?
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:21 am to Night Vision
Muh Milk Prices will be the new thing for the Ds to cry about
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:22 am to Night Vision
Won’t stop eating meat or using dairy?
More than 1 way to get rid of the farting cows.
More than 1 way to get rid of the farting cows.
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:22 am to Night Vision
Is it time to start hoarding 1000 piece puzzles yet?
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:24 am to Night Vision
Brought to you by USAID.
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:25 am to Night Vision
Oh no big daddy. Government me harder. Shut it down.
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:25 am to Night Vision
Beef & chicken... what are the odds?
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:27 am to Night Vision
Now we know what fauci is doing in his spare time.
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:28 am to Night Vision
Funny how bird flu seems to affect mostly cows and chickens.
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:32 am to Night Vision
You are way behind the curve posting this. Pandemics wait for no man and time is of the essence with these sorts of things.
This post was edited on 2/7/25 at 7:33 am
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:33 am to Night Vision
How did Usaid fund this one?
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:34 am to Septiger
This post was edited on 2/8/25 at 6:31 am
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:34 am to Night Vision
Sounds like a Bill Gates operation.
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:42 am to UptownJoeBrown
it looks like the HPAI 2022 flu is fully entrenched and not going away, which is very bad news for anyone trying to raise poultry or livestock, or buy groceries for that matter.
not so good on cats either.
Cat deaths linked to bird flu-contaminated raw pet food, sparking voluntary recall
yet another destructive chinese import.
not so good on cats either.
Cat deaths linked to bird flu-contaminated raw pet food, sparking voluntary recall
yet another destructive chinese import.
Posted on 2/7/25 at 7:43 am to DownshiftAndFloorIt
quote:
So i guess the usda is going to euthanize a shitloat of milk cows to try to get the price to double for some negative Trump press?
Even though they can just make sure the pasteurize all their milk. They'll still say they have to do it
Posted on 2/7/25 at 8:20 am to HagaDaga
This post was edited on 2/8/25 at 6:31 am
Posted on 2/7/25 at 8:29 am to Night Vision
Can somebody tell me is just like all cases of the a flu, that it runs its course and the host recovers and goes on to live their life. What’s the big deal with this over any other type of influenza virus?
Posted on 2/7/25 at 8:32 am to Night Vision
quote:
New strain of bird flu infections found in Nevada herds of dairy cattle; 1st time in US
Microsoft Man doin' work.
Posted on 2/7/25 at 8:37 am to LSUwag
quote:
Can somebody tell me is just like all cases of the a flu, that it runs its course and the host recovers and goes on to live their life. What’s the big deal with this over any other type of influenza virus?
it's usually fatal in birds/poultry, so much so that if a single infected chicken is found in a million-bird operation, the whole lot gets 'depopulated.'
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