Dairy cows in Nevada have been infected with a new strain of bird flu virus different from the one circulating in other herds ...
A new variant of the H5N1 bird flu — the same one that led to the death of a Louisiana man — has for first the first time ...
Dairy cattle in Nevada have been infected with a new type of bird flu that's different from the version that has spread in ...
Consumers can safely drink pasteurized milk, despite reports of dairy cattle infected with the new strain of bird flu.
Herds of cattle in Nevada tested positive for the strain of H5N1 bird flu never before seen in cows, state agriculture ...
Until last week, all bird flu in dairy herds had been identified as the B3.13 variant, which was believed to have come from ...
A new strain of bird flu has infected dairy cows in Nevada, marking the second time the virus has jumped from birds to cattle ...
Nevada dairy cattle infected with a new bird flu strain, Type A H5N1 D1.1, raising concerns of multiple transmission channels ...
While the risk to humans of exposure from cows or milk remains low, this new flu spillover from birds into cows raises the need for continued surveillance.
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.
For the first time, a new genotype of avian influenza has been identified in U.S. dairy cows, prompting biosecurity efforts.
Yet another new strain of bird flu was confirmed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) last week in milk samples collected from dairy cows in ...
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