U.S. considers vaccines to protect poultry from deadly bird flu
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[April 05, 2022]
By Tom Polansek
CHICAGO (Reuters) - The U.S. Department of
Agriculture is looking into vaccines as an option to protect poultry
against deadly bird flu, the agency's chief veterinary officer said as
the country faces its worst outbreak since 2015.
Supporters say vaccines could help keep poultry alive, prevent financial
losses and control food costs, though shots would be too late to stop
the current outbreak that has wiped out 22 million chickens and turkeys
in commercial flocks since February.
Previously, the United States has eschewed vaccines, worried that
importers will ban U.S. poultry shipments because they cannot
distinguish infected birds from vaccinated ones. The United States is
the world's second-largest poultry meat exporter a major egg producer,
with shipments reaching $4.2 billion in 2020.
However, the USDA's Agricultural Research Service is investigating the
potential for a vaccine that could be distinguished from the wild type
of virus spread to poultry, Chief Veterinary Officer Rosemary Sifford
said in an interview.
"We feel strongly that if we could develop a vaccine like that, that
would have less of a trade impact," Sifford said. Researchers estimate
that would take at least nine months to develop, she said.
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Chickens feed from a row of feed bins at C&A Farms in Fairmont,
North Carolina June 10, 2014. Picture taken June 10, 2014.
Bird flu has hit poultry in Europe
and Asia in addition to North America, and Sifford said the USDA is
working with other countries on options for vaccines. Trading has
suffered, as importers like China have blocked imports from more
than a dozen U.S. states with outbreaks.
Though vaccines could protect poultry, some
producers worry they would be cost prohibitive for chickens raised
for meat, which only live about five to seven weeks.
Still the International Poultry Council, an industry group
representing producers worldwide, is reviewing the possibilities,
said Jim Sumner, a council member and president of the USA Poultry &
Egg Export Council.
"We recognize that in some extreme cases of severe outbreaks, maybe
vaccination needs to be considered as an option," Sumner said.
(Reporting by Tom Polansek; Editing by David Gregorio)
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