A dangerous type of bird flu virus (called H5N1) continues to circulate among dairy cows in the US. The virus targets the ...
Bird flu can survive in certain raw milk cheeses for months, even after the aging process that's supposed to make them safe, ...
Darlene Konkle, a state veterinarian with the Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection, said the current ...
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Study Says Bird Flu May Be Able To Survive in Some Types of Cheeses
Researchers say that bird flu has been found in some cheeses, changing what they thought they knew about the safety of the ...
Migratory birds are spreading the deadly H5N1 disease again, forcing German, Danish and Dutch farms to kill poultry stock. US ...
Bird flu cases are increasing in Northern Indiana, posing a significant threat to cats, according to health officials. There ...
Migratory birds are spreading the deadly H5N1 disease again, forcing German, Danish and Dutch farms to kill poultry stock. US ...
After a summer lull in U.S. cases of avian influenza in both poultry and dairy cattle—and no human infections reported in the country since February—the virus is back. The currently circulating bird ...
The Walla Walla County Department of Community Health has been notified about three wild birds in Walla Walla County that ...
The Walla Walla County Department of Community Health learned last week of three wild birds in the Pioneer Park area of Walla ...
A GROWING craze for drinking raw milk, and adding it to things like coffee, has drawn sharp criticisms from health experts.
Researchers discovered that the H5N1 bird flu virus can persist for up to 120 days in raw-milk cheese, challenging long-standing safety rules and raising new questions about the risks of unpasteurized ...
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