Audio By Carbonatix
Nebraska confirmed its first case of bird flu in a dairy cattle herd, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said on Monday, showing the virus continues to spread in livestock after an outbreak began last year.
Dairy cattle in 17 states have been confirmed to be infected since the start of the outbreak in March 2024, though reports of cases generally have slowed since last year, according to the USDA. California, Michigan, Nevada, Idaho, Arizona and Texas also reported cases in herds this year.
Infected cows often produce less milk, consume less feed and suffer other symptoms.
Bird flu viruses circulating in dairy cows and birds pose a low risk to the general public, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Farm workers who come in contact with infected animals are more at risk.
Since 2024, the virus has infected 70 people, mostly workers on dairy farms, according to the CDC.
Pasteurised milk sold to consumers is safe because pasteurisation has been shown to inactivate the virus, the USDA said in a statement.
The herd in Nebraska is located in the central part of the state and has been quarantined, according to the Nebraska Department of Agriculture.
The strain of the virus is similar to a strain from California, the top U.S. milk-producing state, which had a major outbreak last year and found more cases in 2025, the department said.
Nebraska is a major producer of cattle raised for beef, though bird flu has not been confirmed in U.S. beef cattle.
Latest Stories
-
From Snapchat Stories to Snapchat Headquarters: Chef Abbys is taking Ghana to the world one plate at a time
25 seconds -
Photos: Vice President commissions 100 new Metro Mass Transit buses
7 minutes -
GNFS rescues seven trapped in crash at Peki-Tsiame
12 minutes -
GNFS rescues trapped driver after cargo truck overturns at Fante New Town
19 minutes -
Photos from JoyNews National Dialogue on youth and climate change
34 minutes -
Woman accused of threatening President Mahama granted GH¢1 million bail
42 minutes -
One dead, 4 injured in articulated truck collision at Assin Nsuta
51 minutes -
To Nationalise or Transform? Joy Business Hosts Roundtable on Ghana’s Extractive Future
55 minutes -
NACOC partners UPSA-RCC to train enumerators for baseline study on substance use among youth
1 hour -
Kay Codjoe Writes: The dangerous romance between inciteful extremism and “free speech”
1 hour -
From Ghana to Canada: The rising influence of Ghanaian scholars opening global doors for students
1 hour -
Gender Ministry backs Black Maidens ahead of crucial World Cup qualifiers
1 hour -
Many are called, but hostel fees have chosen few
1 hour -
8 suspects arrested in killing of queen mother at Atebubu
2 hours -
RaĂşl Castro indictment threatens to ignite war between US and CubaÂ
2 hours