Bird flu has been detected in Arizona dairy cattle milk, and a dairy farm has been placed under quarantine as a precaution, ...
A new strain of avian flu, H5N1, has spread to dairy cows and domestic cats in the U.S., with a dairy worker in Nevada ...
On February 5, the US Department of Agriculture said dairy cattle in the United States had tested positive for a particular strain of bird flu that was not previously found in cows.
Originally found mostly in wild birds and poultry, H5N1 clade 2.3.4.4b, genotype D1.1, was discovered in dairy cattle last ...
The USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) first confirmed the virus, genotype D1.1, was found in Nevada dairy cattle Jan. 31. All previous detections in dairy cattle were a ...
The worker was exposed to the D1.1 strain after working with infected dairy cattle in Churchill County, the Central Nevada Health District confirmed Monday. The new genotype was first confirmed on ...
The same genotype was detected in a severe human case that resulted in the United States’ first bird flu-related death.
After a different strain of bird flu was recently found in cattle for the first time, experts reveal what this means in our fight against the virus.
A new strain of the bird flu virus that has already killed one person has now been detected in herds of dairy cows in Nevada. Until now, this particular strain had only been associated with birds and ...
State agriculture officials confirmed Tuesday that a dairy farm in Maricopa County tested positive for bird flu – Arizona's first detection of the virus in milk.
A CDC study has found H5N1 bird flu antibodies in veterinarians who had no symptoms and no knowledge they had been working ...