US tests show pasteurized milk safe as bird flu spreads to Colorado
Send a link to a friend
[April 27, 2024]
By Julie Steenhuysen, Tom Polansek
(Reuters) -Additional tests of milk showed that pasteurization killed
the bird flu virus, federal health officials said on Friday, as Colorado
became the ninth U.S. state to report an infected dairy herd.
Federal lawmakers urged the Biden administration to further contain the
virus' spread as tests showed one in five U.S. commercial milk samples
contained remnants of the virus, suggesting the outbreak is more
widespread than previously thought.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) late on Friday said
preliminary results from gold-standard PCR testing showed pasteurization
killed the virus in milk and baby formula. It did not say how many milk
products it had tested but added that it plans to do more testing on 297
products from 38 states.
One person, a Texas farm worker, has been confirmed to have bird flu and
suffered conjunctivitis in the current outbreak following exposure to
dairy cows. Both the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the
World Health Organization said on Friday the current overall public
health risk is low, but is higher for those with exposure to infected
animals.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture confirmed milking cows in Colorado
tested positive, following earlier infections in Texas, Kansas,
Michigan, Ohio, Idaho, New Mexico, North Carolina and South Dakota.
Congress members' push for a stronger response added pressure on federal
agriculture and health authorities still seeking to confirm how the H5N1
virus is spreading and its potential risks to people, one month after
the first detection in a Texas dairy herd.
An analysis of U.S. Department of Agriculture data by a University of
Arizona scientist offers new evidence that the first known H5N1 outbreak
in dairy cattle is more far-reaching than the 34 herds in nine states
that have officially tested positive.
"Containing this before it spreads among humans is critical. Given
lessons learned from COVID, this federal response is insufficient,"
Republican U.S. Senator Mitt Romney said in a post on X.
Some lawmakers, including Romney, have made a bipartisan push to
reauthorize legislation known as the Pandemic and All Hazards
Preparedness Act that lapsed last year and is aimed at bolstering the
nation's response to pandemics and other public health threats. The
recent spread of bird flu and the detection of H5N1 genetic materials in
milk have increased some calls for action.
The virus in the human case is significantly different from the bird flu
virus samples taken from infected cattle that were made public by
government officials last weekend, said Dr. Michael Worobey, an
evolutionary biologist from the University of Arizona.
The difference between the genetic sequences of the worker's virus and
the 239 other samples provided indicate that "this was a very
longstanding, widespread epidemic," he told Reuters.
The Texas Animal Health Commission said it did not receive the location
of the worker's farm or obtain samples of that herd to test because of
the person's confidentiality.
"I think the sequences out there probably aren't representative of
everything that's circulating," said Dr. Richard Webby, a virologist at
St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital in Memphis.
[to top of second column]
|
Signage is seen outside of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
headquarters in White Oak, Maryland, U.S., August 29, 2020.
REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo
A CDC spokesperson said in an email
"there are always some subtle changes in genetic sequences when flu
viruses move from host-to-host," but said data points to the virus
emerging from birds to infect cows and then transmission to the
human.
BIRD FLU TRACES FOUND IN US MILK
One in five commercial milk samples tested in a nationwide survey
contained particles of the H5N1 virus, the FDA said late on
Thursday. The agency said there is no reason to believe the virus
found in milk poses a risk to human health and on Friday described
results of the new tests.
"This says this virus has largely saturated dairy cattle throughout
the country," said Dr. Michael Osterholm, an infectious disease
expert at the University of Minnesota.
Many infectious disease experts and government officials have said
they believe the pasteurization process will inactivate the virus,
also known as avian influenza.
"I'm not worried about the milk itself," said Samuel Alcaine,
associate professor, of food science at Cornell University. "It does
indicate that the virus is more widespread among dairies than we had
previously thought."
Osterholm said the U.S. should be doing much more sampling, in both
dairy and beef cattle, as well as pigs.
Democratic U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin, a significant
dairy state with no reported cases, has urged the USDA to "quickly
deploy additional resources in states that have the opportunity to
prevent the disease from entering herds."
The White House has said that it is monitoring the avian flu
situation, launching an "immediate response team" to ensure the
safety of the nation’s food supply, monitor trends to mitigate risk
and prevent the virus' spread.
Starting on Monday, the USDA will require dairy cows to test
negative for bird flu before they are moved across state lines.
In Indiana, officials are weighing their own potential restrictions,
such as testing within the state, though it has no confirmed cases,
said Bret Marsh, the state veterinarian.
"We're taking a look here at the state level to see what we may need
to do," he said on a conference call.
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen and Tom Polansek in Chicago; Susan
Heavey, Richard Cowan and Trevor Hunnicutt in Washington; and Leroy
Leo and Bhanvi Satija in Bengaluru; Editing by Tasim Zahid and Josie
Kao)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|