Current:Home > NewsDairy cattle must be tested for bird flu before moving between states, agriculture officials say-LoTradeCoin
Dairy cattle must be tested for bird flu before moving between states, agriculture officials say
View Date:2024-12-24 01:35:30
Dairy cattle moving between states must be tested for the bird flu virus, U.S. agriculture officials said Wednesday as they try to track and control the growing outbreak.
The federal order was announced one day after health officials said they had detected inactivated remnants of the virus, known as Type A H5N1, in samples taken from milk during processing and from store shelves. They stressed that such remnants pose no known risk to people or the milk supply.
“The risk to humans remains low,” said Dawn O’Connell of the federal Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response.
The new order, which goes into effect Monday, requires every lactating cow to be tested and post a negative result before moving to a new state. It will help the agency understand how the virus is spreading, said Michael Watson, an administrator with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.
“We believe we can do tens of thousands of tests a day,” he told reporters.
Until now, testing had been done voluntarily and only in cows with symptoms.
Avian influenza was first detected in dairy cows in March and has been found in nearly three dozen herds in eight states, according to USDA.
It’s an escalation of an ongoing outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza spread by wild birds. Since the start of the outbreak, more than 90 million birds in U.S. commercial flocks have either died from the virus or been killed to try to prevent spread.
Two people in the U.S. — both farmworkers — have been infected with bird flu since the outbreak began. Health officials said 23 people have been tested for bird flu to date and 44 people exposed to infected animals are being monitored.
Officials said that samples from a cow in Kansas showed that the virus could be adapting to more animals and they detected H5N1 virus in the lung tissue of a dairy cow that had been culled and sent to slaughter.
So far, officials with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have seen no signs that the virus is changing to be more transmissible to people.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
veryGood! (39846)
Related
- Blake Shelton Announces New Singing Competition Show After Leaving The Voice
- Gift registries after divorce offer a new way to support loved ones
- Poland’s leader says the border with Belarus will be further fortified after a soldier is stabbed
- What's going on with Ryan and Trista Sutter? A timeline of the 'Bachelorette' stars' cryptic posts
- Florida education officials report hundreds of books pulled from school libraries
- Nearly 3 out of 10 children in Afghanistan face crisis or emergency level of hunger in 2024
- France’s Macron urges a green light for Ukraine to strike targets inside Russia with Western weapons
- Stock market today: Asian shares track Wall Street’s retreat
- Full House's John Stamos Shares Message to Costar Dave Coulier Amid Cancer Battle
- Google to invest $2 billion in Malaysian data center and cloud hub
Ranking
- BITFII Introduce
- Selena Gomez reveals she'd planned to adopt a child at 35 if she was still single
- American Airlines hits rough air after strategic missteps
- Nicole Brown Simpson's Sisters Share Rare Update on Her and O.J. Simpson's Kids
- All Social Security retirees should do this by Nov. 20
- Plaza dedicated at the site where Sojourner Truth gave her 1851 ‘Ain’t I a Woman?’ speech
- Poland’s leader says the border with Belarus will be further fortified after a soldier is stabbed
- Xi pledges more Gaza aid and talks trade at summit with Arab leaders
Recommendation
-
Trump pledged to roll back protections for transgender students. They’re flooding crisis hotlines
-
World's first wooden satellite built by Japanese researchers
-
House Ethics Committee investigating indicted Rep. Henry Cuellar
-
Bebe Rexha Details the Painful Cysts She Developed Due to PCOS
-
Burger King is giving away a million Whoppers for $1: Here's how to get one
-
'Game of Thrones' author George R.R. Martin says book adaptations almost always 'make it worse'
-
North Korea’s trash rains down onto South Korea, balloon by balloon. Here’s what it means
-
Man accused of driving toward people outside New York Jewish school charged with hate crimes