Health officials have confirmed that bird flu has been detected in milk from a cattle herd at a Phoenix-area dairy facility.
Officials didn’t identify the facility but confirmed it’s in Maricopa County and currently under quarantine as a precaution.
Sonya Stokes, an emergency room physician in the San Francisco Bay Area, braces herself for a daily deluge of patients sick ...
This week, for the first time in Ohio history, a man living a little more than an hour northwest of Dayton tested positive for bird flu.
It also could mean there are more “virus–infected dairy cattle in states where infection in dairy cattle has not yet been ...
Another spillover of the H5N1 bird flu virus from wild birds to dairy cattle appears to have occurred, this time in Arizona.
A sample of milk from a herd of dairy cows in Maricopa County has tested positive for H5N1 avian influenza, or bird flu, according to the Arizona Department of Agriculture.
Sonya Stokes, an emergency room physician in the San Francisco Bay Area, braces herself for a daily deluge of patients sick ...
Arizona agricultural officials say they now have the first detection of H5N1 avian influenza in milk produced by a dairy herd ...
A new survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has revealed that highly pathogenic avian influenza ...
Jessie Veeder shares observations about the wild black-and-white birds that were once so prevalent on their ranch, then ...