Current:Home > MyGround beef tested negative for bird flu, USDA says -WealthMindset
Ground beef tested negative for bird flu, USDA says
View
Date:2025-04-18 18:23:38
Tests of ground beef purchased at retail stores have been negative for bird flu so far, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced Wednesday, after studying meat samples collected from states with herds infected by this year's unprecedented outbreak of the virus in cattle.
The results "reaffirm that the meat supply is safe," the department said in a statement published late Wednesday after the testing was completed.
Health authorities have cited the "rigorous meat inspection process" overseen by the department's Food Safety Inspection Service, or FSIS, when questioned about whether this year's outbreak in dairy cattle might also threaten meat eaters.
"FSIS inspects each animal before slaughter, and all cattle carcasses must pass inspection after slaughter and be determined to be fit to enter the human food supply," the department said.
The National Veterinary Services Laboratories tested 30 samples of ground beef in total, which were purchased at retail outlets in states with dairy cattle herds that had tested positive.
To date, dairy cattle in at least nine states — Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Michigan, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, South Dakota and Texas — have tested positive for H5N1, which is often lethal to poultry and other animals, like cats, but has largely spared cattle aside from sometimes disrupting their production of milk for a few weeks.
A USDA spokesperson said the ground beef they tested came from stores in only eight of those states. Colorado was only confirmed to have H5N1 in a dairy cow after USDA had collected the samples. The spokesperson did not comment on whether beef from stores in additional states would be sampled.
More results from the department related to bird flu in beef are expected soon. Samples collected from the beef muscle of dairy cows condemned by inspectors at slaughter facilities are still being tested for the virus. The department is also testing how cooking beef patties to different temperatures will kill off the virus.
"I want to emphasize, we are pretty sure that the meat supply is safe. We're doing this just to enhance our scientific knowledge, to make sure that we have additional data points to make that statement," Dr. Jose Emilio Esteban, USDA under secretary for food safety, told reporters Wednesday.
The studies come after the USDA ramped up testing requirements on dairy cattle moving across state lines last month in response to the outbreak.
Officials said that was in part because it had detected a mutated version of H5N1 in the lung tissue of an asymptomatic cow that had been sent to slaughter. While the cow was blocked from entering the food supply by FSIS, officials suggested the "isolated" incident raised questions about how the virus was spreading.
Signs of bird flu have also made its way into the retail dairy supply, with as many as one in five samples of milk coming back positive in a nationwide Food and Drug Administration survey.
The FDA has chalked those up to harmless fragments of the virus left over after pasteurization, pointing to experiments showing that there was no live infectious virus in the samples of products like milk and sour cream that had initially tested positive.
But the discovery has worried health authorities and experts that cows could be flying under the radar without symptoms, given farms are supposed to be throwing away milk from sick cows.
One herd that tested positive in North Carolina remains asymptomatic and is still actively producing milk, a spokesperson for the state's Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services told CBS News.
It remains unclear how H5N1 has ended up in the milk supply. Don Prater, the FDA's top food safety official, said Wednesday that milk processors "can receive milk from hundreds of different farms, which may cross state lines," complicating efforts to trace back the virus.
"This would take extensive testing to trace it that far," Bailee Woolstenhulme, a spokesperson for the Utah Department of Agriculture and Food, told CBS News.
Woolstenhulme said health authorities are only able to easily trace back milk to so-called "bulk tanks" that bottlers get.
"These bulk tanks include milk from multiple dairies, so we would have to test cows from all of the dairies whose milk was in the bulk tank," Woolstenhulme said.
- In:
- Bird Flu
- United States Department of Agriculture
Alexander Tin is a digital reporter for CBS News based in the Washington, D.C. bureau. He covers the Biden administration's public health agencies, including the federal response to infectious disease outbreaks like COVID-19.
TwitterveryGood! (9)
Related
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Man deemed violent predator caught after removing GPS monitor, escaping and prompting 3-day search
- Dodgers' Clayton Kershaw to miss entire 2024 postseason with injury
- Frustrated Helene survivors struggle to get cell service in destructive aftermath
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Wounded California officer fatally shoots man during ‘unprovoked’ knife attack
- Opinion: Please forgive us, Europe, for giving you bad NFL games
- Washington state fines paper mill $650,000 after an employee is killed
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Arizona voters will decide on establishing open primaries in elections
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Former New York governor and stepson assaulted during evening walk
- Jamie Foxx's Daughter Corinne Foxx Says She Celebrated Engagement in Dad's Rehab Room Amid Health Crisis
- Video shows 'world's fanciest' McDonald's, complete with grand piano, gutted by Helene
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Opinion: Texas A&M unmasks No. 9 Missouri as a fraud, while Aggies tease playoff potential
- MIami, Mississippi on upset alert? Bold predictions for Week 6 in college football
- Opinion: Please forgive us, Europe, for giving you bad NFL games
Recommendation
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
Why Tom Selleck Was Frustrated Amid Blue Bloods Coming to an End
Contractors hired to replace Newark’s lead pipes charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud
Retired New Jersey State Police trooper who stormed Capitol is sentenced to probation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Judge denies an order sought by a Black student who was punished over his hair
City of Boise's video of 'scariest costume ever,' a fatberg, delights the internet
Halloweentown’s Kimberly J. Brown Reveals Where Marnie Is Today