STAT June 12, 2024
Ranu Dhillon, Devabhaktuni Srikrishna

Although a third U.S. dairy worker has been confirmed to be infected with the H5N1 bird flu, many dairy farms are still unwilling to use even freely offered personal protective equipment (PPE). This is cause for alarm. Working with a pathogen assigned a biosafety level of 3meaning it “can cause serious or potentially lethal disease through respiratory transmission” — with at best BSL 2 level protections is playing with fire.

This lack of protection leaves farmworkers who interact with potentially infected animals, including dairy cows, chickens, and alpacas, at risk for infection with a virus that has killed half of the people in whom it was diagnosed. And the more H5N1 is able to interact with and infect...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Govt Agencies, Healthcare System, Patient / Consumer, Provider, Public Health / COVID
Growing gulf in US life expectancy deepened by COVID-19 pandemic
Stick to the Science
Understanding the Growing Impact of Obesity in the United States
Wearable electrical nerve stimulation device eases long COVID pain and fatigue, say researchers
Transforming public health: a physician’s innovative approach [PODCAST]

Share This Article