MDAC Commissioner Andrew Gipson issued the following statement.
The Mississippi Board of Animal Health (MBAH) has been notified by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Veterinary Services Laboratory that poultry from a commercial breeder chicken flock in Greene County, Mississippi has tested positive for highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza. Samples from the flock were tested at the Mississippi Veterinary Research & Diagnostic Laboratory, part of the National Animal Health Laboratory Network, and confirmed at the APHIS National Veterinary Services Laboratories in Ames, Iowa.
Avian influenza does not present a food safety risk; poultry and eggs are safe to eat when handled and cooked properly. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the public health risk associated with avian influenza in birds remains low. As a reminder, the proper handling and cooking of all poultry and eggs to an internal temperature of 165 ˚F is recommended as a general food safety precaution.
SITUATION: The State Veterinarian has quarantined the affected premises, and birds on the property have been depopulated to prevent the spread of the disease. Birds from the flock have not entered the food system. The MBAH is working closely with federal animal health officials in Mississippi on a joint incident response.
The MBAH is actively working with the poultry industry to increase monitoring of flocks statewide. This finding is the first case of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) in commercial poultry in Mississippi since the spring of 2023. Since November, HPAI has been detected in migratory waterfowl in multiple areas of Mississippi. The poultry industry was notified and put on high alert to increase biosecurity and surveillance for HPAI.
REPORTING: Hobby poultry owners are encouraged to practice good biosecurity and be aware of the signs of avian influenza and report illness and/or death in birds in the MBAH Online Reporting Form https://agnet.mdac.ms.gov/
Avian influenza in birds can cause sudden death; lack of energy or appetite; decreased egg production; soft-shelled or misshapen eggs; swelling or purple discoloration of head, eyelids, comb, hocks; nasal discharge; coughing; sneezing; incoordination; and diarrhea. A resource for backyard bird health information is online at: https://www.aphis.usda.gov/
UPDATES and INFORMATION: Situation updates and status reports about ongoing avian influenza activities in Mississippi, along with critical disease‐related information, will be posted online at: https://www.hpai.ms.gov/.
16 comments:
Get ready folks.
Better go ahead and get those grocery items today
"Hobby poultry owners are encouraged to practice good biosecurity..." Translation: DEI for poultry.
All you folks eating them eggs over easy better start cooking them thangs till they stiff and brown.
When does the public make a run on toilet paper?
In England, already, one has to register every single bird one owns - every chicken - even your PARAKEET.
The goal, of course, is to control people totally, by controlling the food supply - even to the point of eliminating one's ability to feed oneself. The Road to Serfdom...
And, naturally, Mississippi's politicos have no intention of resisting. Florida and Texas, maybe...
Does this really mean the drive-thru line at Popeye’s will get even slower? Get on down the road with this bull!
463 deaths over the last 21 years is hardly a problem.
conspiratorial minded people are just insane. its a virus not a communist plot.
Birds aren't real.
"depopulated" translation : Dead & Buried
"Is this a chicken joke?" (Rowan & Martin's Laugh-in)
reminder that cat tastes like chicken and dog tastes like goat/sheep. We have plenty of strays to eat
This would not be a thang if chickens were wearing masks.
It’s not a big problem for humans (unless it evolves sufficiently). It’s devstating to poultry flocks of all types. Think of foot and mouth disease in the old Paul Newman movie “Hud”.
The rush has started at Walmart - I'm heading there now!
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