The ongoing bird flu outbreak in the United States
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[May 23, 2024]
(Reuters) - The outbreak of H5N1 bird flu virus has spread to
dairy cows for the first time in the United States, raising concerns
about it spreading to humans through the nation's milk supply.
Since 2022, bird flu in the United States has infected over 90 million
chickens, more than 9,000 wild birds, 52 dairy herds, one person in
Texas who came in close contact with infected cattle and another after
exposure to poultry.
The following is a timeline of the current outbreak in the country:
May 22
The third known human case of bird flu is confirmed in the U.S. with the
infection of a dairy worker in Michigan. It is the second case in humans
this year after the virus was detected in cattle.
April 26
Colorado became the ninth U.S. state to report an infected dairy herd.
April 25
Colombia became the first country to restrict the import of beef and
beef products coming from U.S. states due to bird flu in dairy cows.
April 24
The U.S. government said it will require dairy cattle moving between
states to be tested for bird flu.
April 23
The U.S. Food and Drug administration said it had found bird flu virus
particles in some samples of pasteurized milk, but said the commercial
milk supply remains safe due to pasteurization.
April 11
South Dakota became the eighth U.S. state to find avian influenza in a
dairy herd, after the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) reported
infections in North Carolina, Texas, Kansas, Ohio, Michigan, Idaho and
New Mexico.
April 4
Bird flu dairy cow outbreak widened to a dairy herd in Ohio.
April 2
Mexico's agriculture ministry said it was taking preventative measures
to increase surveillance and reinforce inspections of U.S. livestock
imports after bird flu was found in dairy cattle there.
April 1
The second known human case of bird flu in the United States is reported
in a person from Texas who had contact with dairy cows presumed to be
infected with the virus.
The virus was detected in dairy cattle in New Mexico, Michigan and
Idaho, along with Texas and Kansas.
March 25
The USDA said samples of milk collected from sick cattle in Kansas and
Texas tested positive for avian flu, but the nation's milk supply was
safe.
Dec. 12, 2023
Egg producer Cal-Maine Foods said it had temporarily ceased production
at a facility in Kansas after some of the flock tested positive for
avian flu.
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Dairy farmer Brent Pollard's cows stand in their pen at a cattle
farm in Rockford, Illinois, U.S., April 9, 2024. REUTERS/Jim
Vondruska/File Photo
Nov. 3, 2023
Arkansas, a major U.S. chicken producer, reported its first outbreak
of lethal avian flu in a commercial poultry flock in a year.
Oct. 6, 2023
The United States detected its first case of avian flu on a
commercial poultry farm since April, in a flock of 47,300 turkeys in
Jerauld County, South Dakota.
April 14, 2023
The U.S. government said it was testing four potential bird flu
vaccines for poultry, after more than 58 million chickens, turkeys
and other birds had died in the nation's worst outbreak ever.
March 20, 2023
Some of the world's leading makers of flu vaccines say they could
make hundreds of millions of bird flu shots for humans within months
if a new strain of avian influenza ever jumps across the species
divide.
Oct. 7, 2022
Avian flu infected a commercial flock of breeding chickens in
Arkansas, widening an outbreak of the disease in the southern
region.
Nationwide, more than 47 million birds have been killed by avian flu
or culled to control its spread this year in the nation's worst
outbreak since a record 50 million birds were wiped out in 2015.
April 29, 2022
The first known human case of H5N1 bird flu in the United States
appeared in a person in Colorado, who was involved in culling birds
at a commercial poultry facility.
March 7, 2022
More than 22 million commercially raised U.S. chickens and turkeys
have been killed since February 2022 due to outbreaks of a highly
lethal type of bird flu.
March 4, 2022
A bird flu outbreak is reported in a commercial flock of chickens
being raised for meat in Stoddard County, Missouri, taking the
spread of the virus to 10 commercial chicken and turkey farms in
four states.
Feb. 9 , 2022
The USDA reported an outbreak of highly pathogenic avian flu in an
Indiana turkey flock, the nation's first case in a commercial
poultry operation since 2020.
(Reporting by Christy Santhosh in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini
Ganguli)
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