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Rosalyn's podcast

Rosalyn

Rosalyn's podcast

A daily podcast
Good podcast? Give it some love!
Rosalyn's podcast

Rosalyn

Rosalyn's podcast

Episodes
Rosalyn's podcast

Rosalyn

Rosalyn's podcast

A daily podcast
Good podcast? Give it some love!
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Episodes of Rosalyn's podcast

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British scientists at Acambis in Cambridge have developed an all encompassing flu shot, two injections of which could provide immunity against a wide variety of flu viruses, including the avian flu.
Poultry farms in Dorset will be checked for any signs of the H5N1 strain of the avian flu virus after three swans tested positive for the disease.
Bernard Matthews is to receive nearly £600,000 ($1.2 million) for the approximately 160,000 turkeys that were killed at the farm in Suffolk during the bird flu outbreak there in February.
According to the Food Standards Agency, the Bernard Matthews farm in Suffolk, which was the site of a recent avian flu outbreak, will not face criminal charges because of “insufficient evidence” for the way food waste products were handled.
It has been revealed that during the outbreak of avian flu at Bernard Matthews farm in Suffolk last month, 757 tons of turkey from the UK and 93 tons from Hungary, as well as 50 tons of chicken from Brazil were processed there.
Bernard Matthews may be receiving compensation of almost £670,000 ($1,300,000) for culling turkeys during the avian flu outbreak last month.
An outbreak of avian flu has been confirmed at two chicken farms within 30 miles of Moscow, the first time this virus has been found so close to the capital.
Sales are down 40% on turkey products produced by Bernard Matthews farms, and turkey among all producers is seeing a 30% decline since the discovery of avian flu virus on a Matthews farm in Suffolk.
The 800 mile restriction zone around the Bernard Matthews farm in Suffolk is due to remain for at least three more weeks, as long as there are no further incidents of avian flu virus.
The Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) has come under sharp criticism for not testing wild birds near the Bernard Matthews farm in Suffolk
A government inquiry into the conditions at the Bernard Matthews factory farm in Suffolk has revealed filthy turkey sheds with roofs in squalid condition, drawing rats and wild birds, and encouraging disease.
Shipments of poultry between Britain and Hungary will resume tonight, after diseased turkeys were discovered on a Bernard Matthews farm in Suffolk
Although denying fault, Bernard Matthews has apologized for the avian flu scare at his farm in Suffolk, where the H5N1 strain of the virus was recently found.
The contaminated Bernard Matthews farm in Suffolk has been disinfected and has been given government permission to receive turkeys and begin processing them.
Although it appears there is a strong connection between the avian flu virus surfacing in Hungary and that in Britain, it has still not been conclusively determined how the Bernard Matthews farm in Suffolk became contaminated with the H5N1 stra
Poultry imported from Hungary is continuing to come to Britain, despite the discovery of bird flu at a Bernard Matthews farm in Suffolk.
The National Farmers Union (NFU) want to stop any import of poultry from countries with confirmed avian flu virus until the source of the British outbreak is established.
An investigation is underway by The Food Standards Agency to determine if any of the H5N1 strain of avian flu virus has got into human food because of security flaws on Bernard Matthews farms.
It appears that the recent avian flu outbreak in Britain may have come from infected poultry imported from Hungary.
The British veterinarian who was hospitalized with respiratory difficulties has been tested for the avian flu virus and has no sign of the disease.
A senior British government veterinarian, who was at the Suffolk farm where the recent outbreak of avian flu occurred, is now in hospital and being tested for the avian flu virus.
The discovery of the avian flu virus and subsequent culling of nearly 160,000 turkeys on a farm in Suffolk may have far-reaching repercussions for British poultry farmers.
Government scientists in Britain are beginning to search for the source of this outbreak of the H5N1 strain of avian flu virus, which occurred at a Bernard Matthews farm in Suffolk last week.
The possibility of a bird flu pandemic in the U.K. is looming closer, as preparation is under way to cull 159,000 turkeys on a Suffolk farm where the H5N1 strain of avian flu virus was detected.
Laboratory tests by government veterinarians have confirmed that hundreds of turkeys on a farm in Suffolk, England, were killed by the H5N1 strain of the avian flu virus.
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