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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Saturday, April 27, 2024

A dairy in Colorado has tested positive for the H5N1 virus as federal officials stress the value of pasteurization for protecting consumers from the virus.

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More from the article...

... USDA's Animal and Health Plant Inspection Service added Colorado to its list of states with dairy herd infections -- the first herd with a reported infection in the past week.

USDA now shows nine states with a total of 34 infected herds nationally. ...


#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2024-04-27 01:21 PM | Reply

Related...

20% of grocery store milk has traces of bird flu, suggesting wider outbreak
arstechnica.com

... The Food and Drug Administration reported late Thursday that about 20 percent of retail milk samples from around the country tested positive for genetic fragments of the bird flu, aka highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) virus H5N1.

While retail milk is still considered to be safe, the finding suggests that the spread of the virus in cows is more extensive than is currently known. ...

The FDA used a test called quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR), which can only detect the presence of genetic fragments. In pasteurized retail milk, it is highly likely that those genetic snippets are merely remnants of virus particles destroyed during pasteurization.

The FDA is currently conducting additional testing using egg inoculation tests, a gold standard for detecting a live virus, to confirm the effectiveness of pasteurization. Meanwhile, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Jeanne Marrazzo, told reporters Wednesday that tests at the agency's federal labs so far did not identify live virus from any of its sampling. Additionally, several previous studies have found that pasteurization of eggs"which is done at a lower temperature than it is for milk"was effective at destroying H5N1.

While experts are largely unconcerned with the safety of commercial milk, the potential for wide, unrecognized spread of bird flu in dairy herds is alarming. To date, the US Department of Agriculture has only confirmed infections in 33 herds in eight states. The FDA acknowledged that of its positive samples, "a greater proportion of positive results [are] coming from milk in areas with infected herds." But with tens of thousands of dairy herds in the US, the finding suggests that infections are being missed. It does not necessarily suggest that 20 percent of all cows are affected, since milk is pooled for commercial distribution. But 33 herds alone are unlikely to explain the high prevalence. ...



#2 | Posted by LampLighter at 2024-04-27 01:23 PM | Reply

I've been following this. The jump to cows was completely unexpected. The pasteurization process breaks the virus down, so it's perfectly safe to drink it but a cow that's sick produces a discolored, thick milk. Raw milk is definitely not safe with this going on. Also they've seen this jump to humans (so far only 1 in Texas) from the cows.

Outbreak states include ID, CO, NM, TX, KS, SD, MI, OH, and NC

#3 | Posted by YAV at 2024-04-27 01:54 PM | Reply

Yay!

#4 | Posted by LegallyYourDead at 2024-04-27 02:23 PM | Reply

This has been the latest hysterical "THE WORLD IS ENDING!!" from the pandemic addicted.

The apathy they've created during the wind down of COVID and their continued miscalls for new pandemics is going to really bite us in the ass when something really does happen.

People's apathy will only be broken by direct experience, which will mean it's too late.

#5 | Posted by jpw at 2024-04-27 02:44 PM | Reply

7nbsp

@#3 ... The jump to cows was completely unexpected. ...

That's why I posted the agricultural article as the main one on this thread. That seems to be where the problem is. The second article (from arstechnica.com) shows that a crossover to humans has not really been seen, and that food supplies look safe at this point.

Also, it looks like trade in cows is being affected.

From the main article...

... With USDA requiring testing of milk for lactating dairy cattle before interstate movement, Canadian officials have asked USDA to conduct the same tests for dairy cattle entering Canada from the U.S.

Turkey and the Dominican Republic have banned imports of live cattle, and Colombia has banned imports of live cattle and also restricted imports of beef from slaughter establishments in states that have H5N1-infected cattle. ...





#6 | Posted by LampLighter at 2024-04-27 04:41 PM | Reply

Yep.
At this point this is an interesting event, but not threatening. A slight impact, economically, but nothing compared to what we experienced with chickens. This time with the chickens barely anybody noticed.

#7 | Posted by YAV at 2024-04-27 06:26 PM | Reply

Estimated 90 million avian (wild aquatic birds, commercial poultry and backyard or hobbyist flocks)impacted in 48 states, according to the CDC.
Turkey's are getting hit the hardest - so expect prices to rise for turkey.
South America's been hit hard - in the area of wildlife. 24,000 sea lions have been killed in less than a year.
The Elephant Seal population of 1 year or less in age has been nearly wiped out - only 5% surviving. That is concerning.

I wonder if, if it jumps to humans and is lethal, (two big if's) will this turn even more red states blue? Will red states and idiots like Ladapo find jesus again?

#8 | Posted by YAV at 2024-04-28 02:50 PM | Reply

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