That's the way I understood it, basically, but I've been told more than once that different facilities may have slightly different procedures, and I'm honestly not sure how that works.
Earlier today I read that all of these are acceptable:
Batch pasteurization: Also known as low-temperature long time (LTLT) pasteurization. Heat the milk to 63°C for 30 minutes.
Flash pasteurization: Also known as high-temperature short time (HTST) pasteurization. Heat the milk to between 72°C to 74°C for 15 to 20 seconds.
Ultra-high temperature (UHT) pasteurization: Heat the milk to between 135°C to 140°C for 2 to 4 seconds.
@anarchademic @PacificNic @noyes
It has been airborne between mammals previously, yes.
If you want to dig into it, I have some stuff further up in this thread:
Both my fear and my hope early on were that it if there was already H5N1 out there, that it was "indistinguishable" from COVID in that people were getting sick and either not testing, or getting negative COVID tests and assuming it was actually COVID. The hope being that then it was clearly not 50% fatal.
State's rights.
Because the cows don't die, I think there's an underlying belief that if they let it run its course enough antibodies will be in herds that it'll "go away." To be fair, if the influenza A spikes that have been seen in wastewater were from animal sources, as some have said, they seem to have peaked around May 8th. I'm certainly not predicting it's all on the down swing from there, but, I suspect that's the hope in some circles.
For whatever reason there seems to be a lot of H5N1 science in the news today. Since I haven't been keeping up, here's a bit of a summary of what I've seen.
When the FDA tested milk samples from stores, the original numbers to come out were kind of vague. Eventually they released them all and 20.2% of 297 samples, from 17 states encompassing dairy from 132 processing locations in 17 states were positive for H5N1.
This answered a lot of my early questions. I'd even reached out to an acquaintance who was a purchaser at a grocery chain to try to figure out how milk travelled around the country, but now we have some details. To me, this means the outbreak is a lot bigger than 51 herds in 9 states, which, to be fair, was obvious. But, now that we're talking bigger numbers, let's zoom out to the whole country. There's upwards of 10 million dairy cows in the US. While I am *not* talking about H5N1 being everywhere, I think the possibility exists that we are saying that millions of cows may have been/are infected.
I posted elsewhere today that what we *know* of in terms of spread is mammal to mammal transmission amongst herds of cattle. I do think that accounts for 51 herd in 9 states. However, if we're talking millions of cows, and I'm not sure that we are, we just haven't tested enough to know, then we're likely talking about birds spreading H5N1 across state lines from herd to herd. Unproven, but, keep it on your radar.
Next up, raw milk and pasteurization. Researchers from the Texas A&M Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory obtained cow’s milk samples from an affected herd in New Mexico.
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMc2405495#t1
First up, they "orally inoculated" mice with the raw milk. The mice were sick on day 1, and all lived until day 4 at which point they were euthanized and tested. Infection seems to have set in in the pharynx, and led to systemic illness. I don't think that's a surprise, but there you have it. Further, infections were found in the mammary glands, despite the fact that the mice were not lactating. So, similar to cows and their milk, we seem to have an influenza virus with an affinity for mammary glands.
Next, while they are clear that their bench top experiments do not exactly replicate commercial pasteurization processes, they tested heating the milk to 63C and 72C for a variety of times.
All longer times, 5, 10, 20 and 30 minutes at 63C led to no live virus above detection limits.
At 72C, times of 5 seconds and 10 seconds led to detectable amounts of live virus, but 15 seconds did not.
Further tests at 72C for 15, 20 and 30 seconds were inoculated into embryonated chicken eggs or Madin–Darby canine kidney cells for virus detection. These samples showed "educed virus titers by more than 4.5 log units but did not completely inactivate the virus."
One thing I want to highlight here is this:
"The stability of HPAI A(H5N1) virus in cow’s milk stored at 4°C is another important question. For milk sample NM#93, we detected a decline of only two log units over 5 weeks. HPAI A(H5N1) virus may therefore remain infectious for several weeks in raw milk kept at 4°C."
I've leaned towards believing that H5N1 wouldn't survive long term in milk, but, that's why I try to avoid prognosticating as much as I'm able to. I was apparently wrong about that.
So what does all of that mean for milk at the store? I don't know! We'd have to establish an infectious oral dose to know whether what *could* remain after pasteurization, and refrigeration, is significant.
I have other thoughts, but, that's enough of a novel for now!
"The lowering capacity of Earth’s systems to absorb carbon dioxide makes it urgent to limit emissions, but a separate study has found that countries may boost fossil fuel production by 2050—a recipe for net-zero failure given the problematic rollout of carbon dioxide removal (CDR) technologies they plan to rely on."
#climatechange
https://www.theenergymix.com/co2-skyrockets-big-emitters-may-retain-or-expand-fossil-fuels-studies-show/
Fun fact, if by "fun fact" you mean HOLY CRAP WHAT
In the past, Earth has been hit by the physical debris blasted into space by nearby supernovae. And we have the radioactive seabed sediment to prove it.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-often-do-supernovas-strike-earth/
#ClimateDiary Kidney disease is high and rapidly worsening in coastal Bangladesh due to rising sea levels increasing water salinity as well as extreme heat. For many, like 65yo Khatun, dialysis is too expensive.
The whole of Khulna, once a thriving city, is affected by saline intrusion due to frequent floods, cyclones and tidal surge.
“The global climate crisis is essentially a water crisis,” says Dr Mohammad Shamsudduha at UCL.
If you’re more of a “read the news instead of watching it” person, I’ve got the newsletter post up now!
https://www.adastraspace.com/p/euclid-first-science-images
https://wandering.shop/@skrishna/112492394489859717
In terms of institutional support, I was working at a national lab at the time. By rule, I had to disclose to them that I was visited by law enforcement. I did so, explained the whole situation, and no one cared.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-01468-9
I'm really glad to see this phenomenon getting some attention, and I'd like to point out that it's nothing new, and it's really not that uncommon, unfortunately. Social media has just made it much easier, and seemingly more acceptable.
A long time ago, back when cameras on phones were new and rare, one day I was home visiting my mom. We noticed a man and a woman going door to door in the neighborhood knocking on doors, filming the neighbors talking. They skipped over our house, and were at another neighbor's house when I went out to my car. They ran over to me, got in my face, and started asking me questions about research I had done that outed a particular polluter of a waterway.
My reaction was....not the best. I wasn't prepared for it at all. I got in my car, started it up, and threatened to run the woman over when she got in front of my car and wouldn't let me leave. I didn't run anyone over, but, I did get a visit from the cops. Thankfully she had relented after a short standoff and let me drive away, and no charges were pressed either direction.
Refer back to this anytime you might wonder why I don't use my name online.
I'm sure someday somebody will explain to me why ANY #CarbonCapture should be publicly funded given #BigOil's own executives admit it's a boondoggle. https://www.desmog.com/2024/05/21/despite-advertising-carbon-capture-exxonmobil-saw-marginal-role-for-it-in-fighting-climate-change-shell/
"Everyone is affected by the poison here. In 2022, a study found that 90 per cent of #GrassyNarrows members suffer from #mercury #poisoning. Their symptoms are varied and include neurological problems, including numbness in fingers and toes, seizures, cognitive delays, and other mental health struggles." https://ricochet.media/indigenous/for-them-its-money-for-us-its-life-grassy-narrows-60-year-legacy-of-poison/
#EnvironmentalRacism #Ontario #Canada #Colonialism #IndigenousPeoples #PublicHealth #PublicSafety #HumanRights
@HelenBranswell @sleepfreeparent @DavidM_yeg @driusan
I think that what we have at the moment is one paper that shows a spillover in late 2023 from birds to cows:
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.05.01.591751v1
But data that the virus can go back and forth between cows and birds:
I agree that what we know to date is a spillover event, with mammal to mammal transmission from there. It would be folly to assume that's the end of bird to mammal transmission, though.
I think you misunderstood what I'm saying. I'm not saying the majority of people would even slap up solar panels and buy an EV. I'm saying that's the END GOAL. That's what people are told to aim for at the pinnacle of their environmentalism.
It's both an education problem AND an inconvenience problem. Once they're educated on what must ACTUALLY be done, they're usually not interested.
The NY Times has over 9 million digital subscribers. Even "small" papers, like the Denver Post, claim to reach 6 million unique monthly visitors. In 2020 NPR claimed that nearly 35 million unique visitors went on NPR.org.
1,142 people follow me on Mastodon. What I say on social media is irrelevant.
Michael Mann is, I would assume, the most well known climate scientist. Around 12,000 people follow him here on Mastodon with almost 65,000 followers on X.
It's a drop in the bucket to the reach of news organizations. If it's not being covered, relentlessly, by "mainstream" news sources, no one will know.
Scientists don't control the narrative. Even large organizations like the USDA or CDC put out a press release that gets one mention in media sources, for one morning's news cycle, and then gets lost.
If I'm working at, say, a National Lab, and I have important information to share. I get that to reporters. Have I done my job? If not, what else could I do? I don't control the narrative after it leaves my lab.
"The results were striking: compared to staff wearing surgical masks and not screening patients on admission, the combination of wearing N95 masks and testing patients using RATs was the cheapest, saving an estimated $78.4 million and preventing 1,543 deaths statewide per year. Staff wearing N95s and screening patients with PCR tests was the most effective option, saving $62.6 million and preventing 1,684 deaths per year."
Happy Friday! Enjoy your weekend! Here's your latest ice update - #Arctic sea ice extent is currently the 10th lowest on record (JAXA data)...
• about 120,000 km² above the 2010s mean
• about 370,000 km² below the 2000s mean
• about 810,000 km² below the 1990s mean
• about 1,270,000 km² below the 1980s mean
Other plots: https://zacklabe.com/arctic-sea-ice-extentconcentration/
Moved full time to my other account @BE soon as this instance is still having issues.