Milk itself is still probably safe for most people. However this means that H5N1 is more widespread than has been reported. Probably mild and running through the cow population. |
People are welcome to worry about this in advance, if they’d like. But, there’s nothing I can do so I’m not going to worry about it right now. |
Feels very January 2020 to me…. |
All we need is two weeks to flatten the curve. |
Wouldn't the pasteurization process kill it in milk? |
Sounds like all those cows are anti-masking Trump fanatics. |
Yes, they're just finding DNA fragments but it's useful to know how widespread it is among cows. |
Another chance for pharma to ram vaccines down our throats. |
Don't you mean 5G-building nanite injections by cellular providers? Or have they moved on to 6G? |
If you’re in the Health and Medicine forum and you click on the very last page (2184, I think), you’ll see that every single post was about H1N1 back in 2009. A little deja vu. |
How did that turn out? |
At this point the FDA is saying that it is highly likely, but not certain, that normal pasteurization will kill H5N1.
On Twitter there is discussion in the science community and it appears that many are moving towards ultra-pasteurized milk as a precaution until more is known. |
No traces found in toddler/infant formula by the FDA so far. That would create a nightmare. |
Fine. |
Except for the covidians trying to shut things down. Next time we'll know better. |