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Media Begins Linking Possible Human “Bird Flu” Infections to Meat and Egg Consumption

Media Begins Linking Possible Human “Bird Flu” Infections to Meat and Egg Consumption

A food safety expert shares his thoughts rare steaks and runny eggs as the media neglects to focus on the real hazards associated with HPAI.

I recently did a detailed article on the how American news coverage and policies are tainted with hysteria and panic.

One of the subjects was the unfolding developments related to the spread of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI, aka “bird flu”).  As I have noted many times, the risk to humans is low and I am more concerned about the impact on the food supply.

I also recently reviewed how an unelected bureaucrat (Dr. Deborah Birx) developed and implemented catastrophic covid policies based on fear that undermined the efforts of President Donald Trump to reopen the country after “15 days to slow the spread”.

Now comes one report that a former Food and Drug Administration official is recommending that Americans avoid rare meat and runny eggs because there’s a small risk of catching bird flu from infected meat or poultry products.

That is the advice of former FDA food safety advisor Dr Darin Detwiler who said animal products that are not properly cooked could harbor small fragments of the virus which is currently tearing through US farms.

That means steak should be cooked well done and eggs with runny yolks should be avoided. Even salad dressings like Caesar can be a risk due to being made with raw eggs, he said.

…Dr Detwiler told DailyMail.com: ‘Transmission of bird flu to humans through the consumption of properly cooked poultry products, including eggs, is very low.

But ‘the risk arises with improperly cooked eggs or poultry meat,’ he added.

Detwiler also recommended people avoid sauces, salad dressing, and desserts that used raw eggs.  The food safety expert also offered additional guidance on eggs.

To safely handle eggs means to store them in a refrigerator at 40°F or colder as soon as you come home from the grocery store to prevent the growth of bacteria, Detwiler said.

You also want to avoid using eggs that are cracked or dirty. And remember to wash your hands, utensils and surfaces with soap and water after they come into contact with raw eggs.

In other words, Americans should continue to follow good food safety practices that have been recommended for years.

Good thing I have retired from cooking. I have less to worry about.  But, I digress.

To be fair to Detwiler, he is a safety expert who was asked by “journalists” to give his guidance after bird flu was reported in cattle. I don’t think his remarks were unreasonable in that context.

But the chances are substantially higher of infection with other pathogens if food safety practices aren’t followed. I am concerned that the media is failing, once again, to offer the proper level of risk assessment on another virus.

Humans get infections from bird flu cows and poultry are by close and lengthy contact with an infected animal’s bodily fluids. So, the humans most at risk are the ranchers and poultry farmers handling the live animals.

As we saw with Birx, motivated bureaucrats can use today’s crisis to justify tomorrow’s liberty crushing policy. While Detwiler is no longer with the FDA, I am concerned about the regulators who are in that agency and what they may recommend regardless of the level of risk.

I am extremely mindful that our meat industry has been under the radar of government eco-activists for some time because of “carbon emissions”. I am worried about the justifications that could be made because of ginned up fears about the bird flu….especially with a media willing to suppress challenges to questionable science.

One veterinarian offers an intriguing alternative name for the virus: Low pathogenic bovine influenza (LPBI).

However, Kay Russo, DVM, MAHM, DACPV, believes now that the virus has appeared in dairy cattle in the United States, people need to be more intentional with what they call it. Russo explained why on April 5, while speaking during the webinar, “Managing Novel Disease Introduction and Biosecuity Practices to Protect Herd Health.”

“In my opinion, the disease in cattle at this point should not be referred to as highly pathogenic avian influenza,” said Russo. “I believe it can no longer be considered highly pathogenic avian influenza, given its low mortality, and the fact that it was isolated from a bovine source. It should simply be referred to as either H5N1, or perhaps low pathogenic bovine influenza, at this point in time.”

I like that thought! However, I doubt it will be picked up my our histrionic press and our crisis-loving bureaucrats.

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Comments

UnCivilServant | April 11, 2024 at 5:22 pm

“This moral panic sponsored by the WEF Cricket Farmers Association.”

    AF_Chief_Master_Sgt in reply to UnCivilServant. | April 12, 2024 at 7:32 am

    Many areas will see cicada Brood XIX (combined 13 year and 17 year) this year. This overabundance of insects will be the big push over crickets for a while.

    Eat your bugs, and you will like it.

I should listen to the media why, exactly?

This is simply silly. And the FDA is made up of corrupt liars.

    AF_Chief_Master_Sgt in reply to puhiawa. | April 12, 2024 at 7:33 am

    All three-character government agencies are stacked with liars. I trust none of the self serving bureaucrats.

“…animal products that are not properly cooked could harbor small fragments of the virus…”

In other words, random proteins from destroyed (i.e. dead) viruses, which can’t cause an infection in anyone.

I’m guessing the reason for the panic over the bovine infection is due to the people pedo joe is choosing for his cabinet and other positions.
If you look at their pictures most of them look like bovines.

FDA confirms link between voting for Trump and getting bird flu.

“The modeling is what really convinced us.”

Meanwhile, of course, the high ranking bureaucrats who are warning us to avoid beef and eggs continue to enjoy their rare steaks at DC eateries.

    AF_Chief_Master_Sgt in reply to txvet2. | April 12, 2024 at 7:37 am

    Mmmmmm. DC eateries!

    Surrounded by the smell of a rare Wagyu ribeye, with just a hint of the smell of shit on the sidewalk.

All part of the plan to turn us into vegans.

    drsamherman in reply to Eric R.. | April 11, 2024 at 9:36 pm

    Veganism is a very unhealthy lifestyle. They have more health problems due to their vegan diets lacking sufficient amounts of essential amino acids that pure plant-based diets cannot provide. No thanks!

    A Texas vegan is anyone who won’t eat anything chicken-fried.

Mais fica, fools.

They banned “runny eggs” (sunny side up) in New Jersey decades ago. Kill joys….

motivated bureaucrats can use today’s crisis to justify tomorrow’s liberty crushing policy

The media is helpfully creating that crisis for them, just in time to affect the upcoming election.

    AF_Chief_Master_Sgt in reply to randian. | April 12, 2024 at 7:41 am

    It will be fine!!!!

    All we have to do is keep six feet apart, wear masks indoors and outdoors, surrender all of our rights, and listen to what the guy at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave says when he states: “lsindndjb malksjjjd lkodfncjt!”

Sensational sells…and people love to panic.

BigRosieGreenbaum | April 11, 2024 at 7:35 pm

They can suck it! I’m running with scissors!

Hah! I mock you carnivores as I sit here and sip my Tang and bite into my Impossible Burger on a nice gluten-free kale and rice roll. You are envious!!

From what I can see, Detwiler’s doctoral degree is in an educational leadership discipline, not in a scientific discipline related to microbiology or medicine. I carry doctorates in the latter. I can’t completely rule out the risks he is describing, but I can say I believe he is overinflating the risks and being a panic-monger on the subject. On a zoonotic vector disease (e.g. one that comes from an animal to human transmission), it is very rare to catch it from proper handling of the animal as a food item. For eggs, you can buy pasteurized eggs or use a method from a few websites to pasteurize egg yolks for things like Hollandaise or Caesar salad dressings. And always handle and cook meats properly.

Methinks Detwiler needs a chill pill and also needs to stop being Democrat Detwiler trying to set up an excuse for Plandemic V2.0!

“That means steak should be cooked well done and eggs with runny yolks should be avoided. Even salad dressings like Caesar can be a risk due to being made with raw eggs, he said.”

I never in my born days thought I would see blasphemy so casually expressed where even children of tender years could be within earshot.

Oh and by the way. Caesar salad is made with a coddled egg and most restaurants (if they still include it) use pasteurized eggs. At home it is probably best to use eggs from a local source. Farm fresh eggs do not require refrigeration.

    Azathoth in reply to JRaeL. | April 12, 2024 at 8:41 am

    Caesar dressing is made with raw eggs.

    You couldn’t use a coddled egg

      JRaeL in reply to Azathoth. | April 12, 2024 at 11:31 am

      The recipe I had allowed for using either a raw egg or one that had been coddled for just over a minute but not quite two. I admit coddling eggs till the yolk sets would not work in a dressing. Still I have not kept track of deaths caused by a traditional Caesar salad dressing . Perhaps big salad is keeping the truth from us.

        henrybowman in reply to JRaeL. | April 12, 2024 at 12:11 pm

        You don’t hear much about him these days.
        Or his sidekick, Little Sprout.
        There was a rumor they’d gone underground, somewhere in the Daikon Archipelago, to beat The Reaper.

        Azathoth in reply to JRaeL. | April 12, 2024 at 3:14 pm

        Even a minute could have it set too much, it’d be chancy.

        I do a Grilled Caesar –split a chilled head of Romaine, sear it on a hot grill until you’ve got nice grill marks, Then make the dressing over the lettuce and get it on while the grilled side is still steaming and the other side is icebox cold. The contrast takes the taste to the edge.

    GWB in reply to JRaeL. | April 12, 2024 at 9:19 am

    Farm fresh eggs do not require refrigeration.
    Because they aren’t washed.
    In Europe you don’t have to refrigerate eggs because (for food safety reasons) they don’t wash the eggs, and the outer membrane keeps out everything from the outside.
    In America food safety requires washing the eggs so that nothing can be transferred to the inner part of the egg while you’re cracking them. (And, after all, in America, refrigerators are ubiquitous.)

    It’s one of the better examples of different approaches to the same issue, with different consequences.

Looks like they’re trying to work another SUV Mom scare. So tired of this crap.

So, is this the thing they’re going to try to use to steal the election for their pedophile?

    Paul in reply to Ironclaw. | April 12, 2024 at 7:29 am

    It’s a trial balloon at this point, but yes, count on more race riots and another excuse for The Retard Joe Biden* to hide in his basement. And oh yeah, universal mail-in ballots.

Yeah.. I read the recommendations yesterday and then this morning I had eggs over easy and a medium rare steak.

Have they identified the presence of the virus in meat or eggs? Does the virus survive stomach acids?

These foods could harbor “…small fragments of the virus?”

Is there any evidence at all this is harmful? After all, aren’t some vaccines made with virus particles?

All of this is about making it illegal to produce your own food.

animal products that are not properly cooked
Well, duh. If you just tear into a hunk of cow in the pasture, you’re likely to catch all sorts of things. If you cook it properly, it doesn’t have to be well done to be safe. Raise the internal temperature slowly enough and it stays relatively rare. Most steakhouses do this sort of thing.

As to “runny” eggs? I still think a good British sausage-egg-and-chips with Breakfast Tea, where the eggs are sunny-side up or over-easy is a fabulous way to start the day. Dredging the sausages in the egg yolk… yummmmmm.

Dang, now I’m hungry.

    JRaeL in reply to GWB. | April 12, 2024 at 11:35 am

    Did you mean to leave out the biscuits? You can have the best of sopping with an order of biscuits and sausage gravy to go along with your sausage and eggs. If you have a mind to a touch of syrup adds a nice contrast to the saltiness of the biscuits.

nordic prince | April 12, 2024 at 11:36 am

“The issue” is never the issue. They get vapors over “bird flu” or whatever, but the real issue is that they must have control over the unwashed masses.

Total control over the food supply is a great method of implementing that goal.

    henrybowman in reply to nordic prince. | April 12, 2024 at 12:15 pm

    In the old days, if they couldn’t find a real danger, they’d just make it up.
    These days, with all the new science, if they can’t find a real danger, they just make it.

CDC has negative credibility, even less than AP or the UN.

With any luck, Trump shut them down.