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The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced the end of the bird flu emergency, at least for now.
New versions of the H5N1 virus are increasingly adept at spreading. Suggestions to either let it rip in poultry or vaccinate the birds could backfire.
U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins recently provided an update on the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s ...
While H5N1 does not have high mortality rates in dairy cows, the infection causes decreases milk production and milk quality, ...
Over 3,000 chickens dead. Rapid Response Team formed. Stay updated on avian influenza fears and biosecurity measures.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ended its emergency response to bird flu as the outbreak that sickened dozens of people, spread to cattle, and drove up egg prices has abated.
By Stephen Smoot “The poultry industry is doing well.” And no one would have a better finger on the pulse of the poultry ...
The CDC ends its emergency response to H5N1 bird flu after recording 70 human cases and one death nationally, even as experts ...
Both zoos shut their doors on May 13 after a tigress named Shakti tested positive for the H5N1 strain of avian influenza and ...
The shift reflects the current public health situation, marked by declines in human cases as well as animal detections ...