Many US dairy workers yet to receive protective gear for bird flu
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[May 23, 2024]
By Tom Polansek and Heather Schlitz
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Many U.S. dairy farms have not yet increased health
protections against bird flu for employees during an outbreak in cows,
according to workers, activists and farmers, worrying health experts
about the risk for more human infections of a virus with pandemic
potential.
Epidemiologists are concerned the virus could potentially spread and
cause serious illnesses as farmers downplay the risk to workers while
employees are not widely aware of cases in U.S. cattle.
The U.S. government said on Wednesday that a second dairy worker
contracted bird flu since cattle first tested positive in late March and
that investigators are looking into whether the person was wearing or
offered protective equipment.
Nearly 24,000 farms sell milk around the country, and they offer varying
protections to staff. Lobby group the National Milk Producers Federation
said it encouraged farms to use protective equipment in line with
federal recommendations and heard of increased worker protections.
Three dairy workers, seven activists and two lawyers who assist farm
employees told Reuters that dairy owners have not offered equipment like
face shields and goggles to staff who spend 10- to 12-hour days
side-to-side with cows. Three large dairy companies with tens of
thousands of cows declined to comment on their procedures.
The workers - all based in New York, a major dairy producer - said they
heard of the new illness affecting cattle through the media or community
organizers, not their employers. One, 39-year-old Luis Jimenez from
Mexico, said last week it was business as usual.
"They're not doing anything," he said.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in April and May
advised workers to use personal protective equipment (PPE) if they may
be exposed to sick livestock, after a Texas dairy worker tested positive
for bird flu. On May 6, the agency asked states to make equipment
available to workers.
CDC wants "to make sure that farm workers across the country, whether
they are at a farm with an affected herd or not, have access to PPE,"
said Nirav Shah, principal deputy director, last week.
New York state said it is assessing CDC's recommendation and has not yet
distributed equipment. Texas, New Mexico and Colorado, where cattle were
infected, said they distributed equipment to eight dairies combined.
Kansas, Idaho and Wisconsin said they have equipment, but no farmers
asked for it.
Michigan, where the second dairy worker tested positive, said many farms
have protective gear but the state is coordinating a way to make it
available for those that need more.
Dairies became more aware of bird flu's risks in late April after the
U.S. government began requiring that cows test negative before crossing
state lines, said Emily Yeiser Stepp, who oversees a National Milk
Producers Federation program that covers workforce development.
Still, "reaching out into some of our rural networks takes a little
longer," she said when told of workers who said they were not informed
of recommendations for protective equipment.
CLOSE CONTACT WITH COWS
The U.S. confirmed bird flu in dairy cattle in nine states. Scientists
have said they believe the outbreak is more widespread based on findings
of H5N1 particles in about 20% of retail milk samples.
Bird flu has caused serious or fatal infections globally among people in
close contact with wild birds or poultry. In cows, the U.S. Department
of Agriculture said it believes unpasteurized milk is the primary vector
for transmitting the virus, though officials do not know exactly how it
spreads.
Health experts advise dairy workers to wear gloves and disposable
coveralls that can block milk splashes on their bodies or clothing.
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Automation is used as a worker helps milk Holstein cows at Airoso
Circle A Dairy in Pixley, California, U.S., October 2, 2019. Picture
taken October 2, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
Jimenez said his coworkers are under
pressure to work so quickly that they sometimes do not have time to
wash their hands before meals and often drive home in their work
clothes.
Workers attach and detach milking equipment on cows, putting their
faces close to unpasteurized milk. Most are immigrants and many do
not have health insurance.
"When you're milking, splashes can't be avoided. When it splashes in
our eyes, we wash it out with water," said another New York worker,
who requested anonymity because he is undocumented.
Lucas Sjostrom, a farmer and executive director of the Minnesota
Milk Producers Association, uses robotic machines to attach milking
equipment to cows, but said he is being extra conscious that human
workers wear gloves while transporting unpasteurized milk. Minnesota
has not reported bird flu in cows.
In Indiana, another state without confirmed cases, farmer Steve
Obert said he has not increased precautions for workers, though that
could change if his herd tests positive. Extra protective equipment
is not comfortable to wear, he added.
"We're rather isolated and I don't think the risk is really great,"
said Obert, executive director of the industry group Indiana Dairy
Producers.
BLOOD-RED EYES
The infected Texas worker suffered conjunctivitis and broken blood
vessels that turned his eyes scarlet red, according to a photo
published in the New England Journal of Medicine. He reported
wearing gloves when working with cows but not respiratory or eye
protection, the journal said.
Scientists are watching for changes in the virus that could make it
spread more easily among humans. Epidemiologists said it could cause
more serious illnesses if it mutates or infects someone with a
compromised immune system.
Some dairies with infected cows have resisted allowing federal
officials on their farms because of financial concerns, said Gregory
Gray, a University of Texas Medical Branch professor studying cattle
diseases.
The CDC said it would like to test more farm workers, but it is not
required.
New Mexico had anecdotal reports of workers with symptoms similar to
conjunctivitis, but most were not tested, according to internal
state documents that were dated April 26 and obtained by Reuters
under a public records request. The workers were not tested because
they did not seek healthcare, the New Mexico Department of Health
said.
Policy changes are needed to encourage workers to seek treatment,
such as emergency income assurance for those who test positive, said
Brian Castrucci, an epidemiologist and CEO at health policy group
the de Beaumont Foundation.
"I don't want to wait until we have a dead dairy farm worker until
we ratchet up what we're doing," he said.
(Reporting by Tom Polansek and Heather Schlitz in Chicago; Editing
by Michael Erman)
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