US proposes bulk milk testing for bird flu before cattle transport
Send a link to a friend
[May 30, 2024]
By Tom Polansek
CHICAGO (Reuters) - The U.S. Agriculture Department has proposed
allowing farmers to bulk test the milk of their dairy cows for bird flu
rather than test milk from individual cows before gaining approval to
ship them across state lines, according to state and industry officials
and agency documents.
The spread of the virus to cows and two dairy workers since late March
raised concerns about the threat of a pandemic, and government officials
are trying to contain the disease while minimizing economic damage to
the farm sector.
The agriculture department (USDA) in late April began requiring
lactating cows to test negative before being shipped across state lines.
It later said the order likely helped prevent the spread of the virus to
new states.
USDA reported 2,492 pre-movement tests as of Wednesday but said that
number does not equal the number of animals tested.
A pilot program for bulk testing milk could begin in June for farmers
who choose to participate, according to documents USDA sent to industry
officials this week that Reuters obtained.
Agriculture officials in six states told Reuters on Wednesday they were
reviewing USDA's proposal for the program, which has not been previously
reported. USDA declined to comment.
"Once it has support and participation from farms, the USDA program
could help reduce the threat of H5N1 in dairy herds, further mitigate
risk among farm workers, and continue to protect our nation's commercial
milk supply," the International Dairy Foods Association said in a
statement to Reuters.
USDA has confirmed the H5N1 bird flu virus in cattle in nine states. The
U.S. Food and Drug Administration estimated that 20% of the U.S. milk
supply shows signs of the virus, indicating a wider spread is likely.
Farmers said testing milk from bulk storage tanks offers the chance to
collect a sample from all the cows within a herd and would be more
efficient than testing samples from individual animals.
Bulk tanks of milk from individual herds would need three consecutive
weeks of negative testing results to show the herd is free of bird flu
and enter the new program, according to USDA documents dated May 24.
Farmers would then need to submit milk samples from bulk tanks weekly to
maintain their status, the documents say. Continued negative results
would mean no additional testing is needed before shipping cattle
between states, according to the documents.
[to top of second column]
|
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
USDA said it could establish disease
freedom in states or regions if enough farmers participate. If a
herd tests positive in the program, there would be an epidemiologic
investigation and evaluation of movement for animals considered to
be low risk, according to the documents.
The program would mostly benefit large dairies that
move animals, veterinarians said.
Three weeks of testing milk from bulk tanks is not enough to confirm
a herd is free of bird flu, though, said Gail Hansen, a veterinary
and public health consultant. Samples from healthy cows could dilute
samples from a small number of infected cattle in the same herd when
their milk mixes in the tank, she said.
"It may give people a false sense of assurance," Hansen said.
State officials said they have questions about the logistics of the
proposed program.
Texas said USDA made state animal-health officials aware of the
program but has not yet provided final details about how it will be
implemented.
The program is intended to assist with disease control in cattle but
could have negative market implications for farmers, said Bret
Marsh, Indiana's state veterinarian.
"Indiana's biggest concern is: How will the information gathered be
used? Any finding in Indiana could place us in the affected-state
category, subjecting Hoosier producers to increased restrictions
from other states," he said.
Michigan, which has more confirmed cattle infections than any other
state, is interested, said Tim Boring, director of the state's
Department of Agriculture and Rural Development.
"One of the basic safeguards here is to look at restricting animal
movement," he said. "The last thing we want to be doing is moving
sick cattle around in different farms and thereby spreading the
disease further."
(Reporting by Tom Polansek. Additional reporting by PJ Huffstutter;
editing by David Evans)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|