Go Back
  • For Business
  • |
  • Warnings
  • Data Suite
  • Forensics
  • Advertising
  • Superior Accuracy™
Winter weather roars to life with snow in the Northeast, Great Lakes. Get the forecast. Chevron right

Columbus, OH

28°F
Location Chevron down
Location News Videos
Use Current Location
Recent

Columbus

Ohio

28°
No results found.
Try searching for a city, zip code or point of interest.
settings
Columbus, OH Weather
Today WinterCast Local {stormName} Tracker Hourly Daily Radar MinuteCast® Monthly Air Quality Health & Activities

Around the Globe

Hurricane Tracker

Severe Weather

Radar & Maps

News

News & Features

Astronomy

Business

Climate

Health

Recreation

Sports

Travel

For Business

Warnings

Data Suite

Forensics

Advertising

Superior Accuracy™

Video

Winter Center

AccuWeather Early Hurricane Center Top Stories Trending Today Astronomy Heat Climate Health Recreation In Memoriam Case Studies Blogs & Webinars

News / Health

US health agencies launch new studies of H5N1 bird flu in dairy workers and dairy products

By Brenda Goodman, CNN

Published Jun 26, 2024 9:32 AM EST | Updated Jun 26, 2024 9:32 AM EST

Copied

A customer shops for milk at a grocery store in December 2023 in San Anselmo, California. The FDA says it will test more dairy products pulled from grocery store shelves as government health agencies announce new research into the potential impacts of the H5N1 bird flu outbreak in dairy cattle. (Photo credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images via CNN Newsource)

CNN) — US health agencies are starting new rounds of tests on dairy workers and milk products to better understand the possible impact of H5N1 bird flu.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is partnering with the state of Michigan to begin a highly anticipated study to assess whether workers exposed to infected cattle had themselves become infected. And the US Food and Drug Administration is testing what’s known as flash pasteurization after recent studies raised questions about whether the method neutralizes all infectious virus in milk.

The projects are part of a suite of new research announced by federal agencies on Tuesday to understand the dynamics of H5N1 bird flu, which for the first time jumped from birds to dairy cattle around the beginning of the year.  Since late March, more than 120 herds across 12 states have tested positive for the highly contagious infection, which appears to be spreading through contact with raw milk, the US Department of Agriculture confirmed.

“We know this to be spread by contact with milk,” said Dr. Eric Deeble, who is the acting senior adviser for highly pathogenic avian influenza at the USDA.

Deeble said that early on, the movement of cattle was largely driving spread of the infection. But since the USDA ordered cattle to be tested before they could be moved state-to-state in late April, the infection has been ferried between farms on shared equipment and shared workers, according to a recent epidemiological study by the Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, or MDARD.

“We know that milk has really high viral loads, and so when we’re looking at transmission patterns, that’s a really high risk, it seems,” MDARD Director Dr. Tim Boring said.

How the virus is using humans to hitch a ride — whether through infection or contaminated clothing or skin — isn’t clear yet, Boring said.

“My guess it’s perhaps not truly binary, whether it is on people or in people,” Boring said.

Dairy farmers have been reluctant to let government officials onto their farms forwidespread testing of their herds, and farm workers have shied away from testing, even when they have symptoms.  Advocates say workers are reluctant to test since it might mean missing work and pay.

Last week, Michigan said it would pay up to 20 dairy farms a maximum of $28,000 each to participate in research. That financial assistance is on top of funds the federal government is offering.

The offer seems to have worked.  On Tuesday, the CDC announced that it had partnered with the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services to launch a study to test the blood of farm workers for antibodies to the H5N1 virus.

“The point of this study is to determine if there is asymptomatic infection” of workers who have been exposed to cows infected with the H5N1 virus, said Dr. Demetre Daskalakis,  director of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases.

The FDA also announced Tuesday that it has started another round of dairy product sampling to address gaps in its previous testing.  This time, the 155 products it’s plucking from store shelves will include raw milk cheeses, cream cheese, ice cream and butter, said Dr. Don Prater, acting director of the FDA’s Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition.

Earlier this year, FDA’s initial testing of milk and sour cream and other and other kinds of dairy products purchased at grocery stores found traces of virus in 1 out of 5 items sampled. Further testing confirmed, however, that those viral fragments were inactive and couldn’t make anyone sick, leading the agency to declare milk and other dairy products safe to consume, as long as they’re pasteurized.

But two recent lab studies published in the New England Journal of Medicine raised new questions. The studies heated raw, infected milk to the times and temperatures used for flash pasteurization — the most common form of pasteurization in the US — and found that while it greatly reduced levels of infectious virus in milk, it didn’t completely neutralize all of it.

Scientists cautioned, however, that because the experiments didn’t replicate the full flash pasteurization process, including a pre-heating step, more research was needed. Prater said the FDA believes its experiments are closer to the method used in commercial milk processing.

Also on the FDA’s to-do list are studies to measure the persistence of the virus in cheese as it ages, and pooled testing of raw milk samples from dairies.

Prater didn’t give a specific timeline for when the agency would have results from those studies, but said it hope to have the information in the very near future.

Read more aboutt bird flu:

We aren’t doing enough about the risk of bird flu but we can
Bird flu is rampant in animals. Humans ignore it at our own peril
As bird flu infects dairy cattle, FDA curbs sales of raw milk

The-CNN-Wire™ & © 2024 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

Report a Typo

Weather News

video

Tornado in Brazil claims at least five lives

Nov. 8, 2025
Weather News

50 years later, remembering the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald

Weather News

Homes are collapsing in North Carolina. It could spell trouble for oth...

Nov. 7, 2025
Show more Show less Chevron down

Topics

AccuWeather Early

Hurricane Center

Top Stories

Trending Today

Astronomy

Heat

Climate

Health

Recreation

In Memoriam

Case Studies

Blogs & Webinars

Top Stories

Winter Weather

Early snow expands from Great Lakes to Northeast, interior Southeast

3 hours ago

Weather News

Tornado tears through southern Brazil, killing at least six

1 day ago

Winter Weather

Arctic air advances, ushering in coldest air of the season for some

4 hours ago

Astronomy

Blue Origin to attempt second New Glenn rocket launch, booster landing

8 hours ago

Winter Weather

Travel delays to mount in California from storm racing through

3 hours ago

More Stories

Featured Stories

Travel

UPS, FedEx ground MD-11s after crash in Louisville

8 hours ago

Weather News

Record rains in Buenos Aires leave acres of farmland underwater

7 hours ago

Recreation

A fleeting autumn illusion turns N.C. mountain into an 'animal'

3 days ago

Hurricane

Homeland Security OKs additional $155M for Helene recovery in N.C.

7 hours ago

Climate

Amazon lakes became ‘simmering basins’ as temperatures spiked

3 days ago

AccuWeather Health US health agencies launch new studies of H5N1 bird flu in dairy workers and dairy products
Company
Proven Superior Accuracy™ About AccuWeather Digital Advertising Careers Press Contact Us
Products & Services
For Business For Partners For Advertising AccuWeather APIs AccuWeather Connect RealFeel® and RealFeel Shade™ Personal Weather Stations
Apps & Downloads
iPhone App Android App See all Apps & Downloads
Subscription Services
AccuWeather Premium AccuWeather Professional
More
AccuWeather Ready Business Health Hurricane Leisure and Recreation Severe Weather Space and Astronomy Sports Travel Weather News Winter Center
Company
Proven Superior Accuracy™ About AccuWeather Digital Advertising Careers Press Contact Us
Products & Services
For Business For Partners For Advertising AccuWeather APIs AccuWeather Connect RealFeel® and RealFeel Shade™ Personal Weather Stations
Apps & Downloads
iPhone App Android App See all Apps & Downloads
Subscription Services
AccuWeather Premium AccuWeather Professional
More
AccuWeather Ready Business Health Hurricane Leisure and Recreation Severe Weather Space and Astronomy Sports Travel Weather News Winter Center
© 2025 AccuWeather, Inc. "AccuWeather" and sun design are registered trademarks of AccuWeather, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Cookie Policy | About Your Privacy Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information | Data Sources

...

...

...