The FDA stressed that the nation's milk supply is safe to drink because pasteurization kills the virus, though it does not ...
The Nebraska Department of Agriculture has issued an importation order requiring all breeding female cattle entering the state to have a travel entry permit issued by the NDA before that ...
One of the big takeaways is that USDA researchers think the spillover of bird flu from wild birds to cattle began late last ...
The highly pathogenic avian influenza virus in dairy cattle continues to infect new herds and has become a priority for state ...
In the new study, the researchers collected samples containing virus from 26 dairy farms in eight states. Cows are not ...
A US farmworker who caught bird flu after working with dairy cattle in Texas appears to be the first known case of mammal-to-human transmission of the virus, a new study shows.
A Husker volleyball player's home was one of thousands destroyed in last week's tornado outbreak.
The Texas dairy worker infected by H5N1 "did not disclose the name of their workplace," frustrating investigators.
With little incentive for US farmers to test their cattle, and many undocumented laborers on dairy farms, the full scale of the outbreak is unclear.
Is it safe to drink milk? Will the virus jump to humans? Answers to questions about bird flu spreading in dairy cattle.
B ird flu, or avian influenza, can be deadly in birds but normally doesn’t infect people. While some strains have caused serious disease and even death in humans, most cause relatively mild symptoms.
Different types of mammals in many U.S. states have tested positive now for bird flu. What's the risk for humans?