In early 2023, as news of H5N1 avian influenza ("bird flu") spreading among dairy cows reached the White House, the stage was set for a high-stakes conflict between two government agencies. Rear Admiral Deborah Friedrichs, head of the White House's Office of Pandemic Preparedness and Response Policy (OPPR), immediately set her sights on curbing the virus's spread.
The Department of Agriculture (USDA), led by Secretary Tom Vilsack, also took up the task — but with a different set of priorities. What unfolded was a stark clash of interests, revealing the tensions between safeguarding public health and protecting the powerful dairy industry.
Friedrichs and the OPPR laid out an ambitious response plan to confront H5N1 that reportedly included launching on-the-ground studies of farms and infected animals. It was to involve working with farmers and state officials to gain access to outbreak zones and implementing aggressive biosecurity measures. The goal was clear: control the spread of the virus as quickly as possible.
It didn't take long for the OPPR to realize that the USDA was not on the same page.
Did the USDA thwart a quick response to the virus?
While the White House pushed for a response focused on public health, the USDA and the Food and Drug Administration, which share jurisdiction over the production, transportation, and storage of eggs, seemed more concerned with protecting the interests of the dairy industry. Dairy representatives worried that the virus and subsequent restrictions could cripple their business.
According to a former USDA official, dairy industry insiders were alarmed that White House staff was contacting them directly, bypassing the usual channels through the USDA. State veterinarians reported that they were told to discontinue routine calls with the USDA's veterinary services. This escalated the communication rift between the White House and the USDA.
The USDA had historically relied on the cooperation of farmers and industry stakeholders, and the bureaucrats feared losing that trust. In contrast, the White House's OPPR and its public health allies grew increasingly frustrated as the USDA dragged its feet. This tension and communication failures have come to define the fractured nature of the government's response to the H5N1 outbreak.
While the OPPR and the USDA were locked in a bureaucratic standoff, the virus was spreading. The response was mostly left to individual states to manage the fallout. In late March, Texas state veterinarian Lewis "Bud" Dinges faced a critical decision: whether to halt the interstate movement of dairy cows to prevent further transmission of the virus. It was a straightforward public health measure — if you stop the cows from moving, you stop, or at least slow, the spread of disease.
Yet, for unexplained reasons, Dinges declined to act. Soon after, infected cows from Texas carried the virus to other states, exacerbating the outbreak. I consider that to be malfeasance by Dinges. But it also raises the question of whether he bent to industry pressure.
There was more ignorance and irresponsibility in the state government in Texas. Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller, a vocal advocate for the dairy industry, dismissed the threat, downplaying the outbreak and claiming that it affected only a small fraction of cows in the state. He claimed that he didn't know anyone who had lost livestock. Miller's refusal to allow the CDC to test farmworkers for exposure reflected a broader resistance to federal intervention, further complicating efforts to contain the virus— yet another example of flagrant malfeasance in Texas's government. The USDA sat on its hands as Texas refused to act.
The conflict of interest between the agricultural industry and public health is built into the politics of the USDA. It is analogous to the department's dual but incompatible roles in overseeing organic agriculture. The agency is empowered to both promote organic farming and set industry standards and permitted practices. In recent years, as it became increasingly apparent that organic farmers were financially hard-pressed to follow the standards they had helped draft, they appealed repeatedly to bureaucrats to loosen the rules; the USDA often complied.
Farmers, fear and gaming the system
The USDA eventually issued a federal order requiring limited interstate testing of cows, but the response from farmers was lukewarm at best. Despite the growing number of infections, dairy farmers across the country hesitated to embrace testing and containment measures. Herds that moved between states often contained hundreds of cows, but the new testing mandate required only testing of a small sample: 30 cows. Even worse, rumors spread that some farmers were gaming the system by prescreening cows in private labs, ensuring that only healthy animals were tested before official samples were sent to the USDA. If true, that could be criminal behavior.
The lack of comprehensive testing allowed the virus to continue circulating largely unchecked. In states that mandated the testing of milk in bulk tanks, the outbreak was far more visible. In Colorado, more than half of the state's dairy herds showed signs of infection. Other states, however, lagged in their vigilance.
California, the nation's largest dairy producer, became the next major battleground when cows transported from Idaho imported the virus. By October, 124 of California's 1,100 dairy herds had been infected, and the virus showed no signs of slowing.
As the virus continued to spread, farmers were reluctant to test their herds, fearful that a quarantine could destroy their businesses.
Veterinarians felt the stress of the outbreak. They found themselves buffeted by conflicting pressures from public health officials, farmers, and industry stakeholders. Fred Gingrich, executive director of the American Association of Bovine Practitioners, acknowledged their difficult position, with some of those veterinarians having to choose between their professional ethics and the demands of the farmers they served.
Fractured US food regulatory system
As the H5N1 outbreak has ravaged the dairy industry, public health officials, veterinarians, and farmers have been left grappling with the consequences of a fractured response. Researchers relied on data-sharing platforms like GISAID (the Global Initiative on Sharing All Influenza Data), a science initiative that is supposed to provide access to genomic data of influenza viruses, but the USDA's submissions were often delayed and lacking in critical details. This failure to provide timely, actionable information hindered efforts to control the outbreak.
The USDA has defended its slow and measured approach, emphasizing the need for accuracy and thoroughness in its data collection. But critics within the public health community — of whom I am one — argue that the virus could have been contained early on. Instead, it continued to spread, fueled by inaction resulting from distorted priorities at the USDA and a lack of unified leadership.
As the virus continues to evolve and spread, the consequences of this disjointed response may yet escalate, both for the dairy industry and for public health. As I ended Part 1 of this series:
The proximate question is whether this delayed and bungled response will lead to policy oversight reforms or whether we'll continue to play a dangerous game of catch-up.
A new development this week has made that game of catch-up both more difficult and more dangerous, as this October 31 headline and sub-headline in Scientific American make clear:
Bird Flu Is One Step Closer to Mixing with Seasonal Flu Virus and Becoming a Pandemic
Humans and pigs could both serve as mixing vessels for a bird flu–seasonal flu hybrid, posing a risk of wider spread
As the article explains, coinfection of an animal such as a pig with different flu viruses can lead to "reassortment" of pieces of the flu genome, which is comprised of eight RNA segments:
When multiple viruses infect the same cell and replicate, they can swap these segments, producing one of 256 possible combinations. This reassortment can create a virus that contains features of both parent viruses, which could make it more transmissible and virulent. The process is thought to have produced the 2009 H1N1 swine flu from a mix of U.S. and European strains of pig flu virus, launching a (thankfully mild) pandemic.
The long-term question is whether federal agencies and the officials who manage them will be permitted to operate under conditions that present a clear conflict of interest – whether their first allegiance is to society's well-being or a narrow, commercial constituency. Congress needs to act before a virus reshapes the world's public health landscape.
Note: Much of the information herein was first disclosed by the excellent investigative reporting of Katherine Eban.