Lena H. Sun - The Washington Post

Lena H. Sun

Washington, D.C.

National reporter focusing on health

Education: Cornell University, BS in communication; Columbia University, MA in journalism

Lena H. Sun is a national reporter for The Washington Post covering health, with a special focus on public health and infectious disease. A longtime reporter at The Post, she has covered a variety of beats, including the Metro transit system, immigration and education. She has also served as The Post's Beijing bureau chief.
Latest from Lena H. Sun

Bird flu found in Michigan dairy worker, second U.S. case in two months

Federal officials ramp up testing and vaccines in case of broader spread.

May 22, 2024
Cows being milked at Mystic Valley Dairy in Dane County, Wis.

Federal dollars to increase bird flu testing for dairy cows, farm workers

The federal government announces financial incentives to encourage broader testing of cattle and expanded security measures to control a growing bird flu outbreak.

May 10, 2024
Cows are milked at Mystic Valley Dairy in Dane County, Wis., on Wednesday. More than 40 herds in nine states have been infected with the H5N1 virus.

FDA says new bird flu test results show milk supply is safe

Testing of milk and other dairy products sold in grocery stores shows pasteurization kills a highly pathogenic strain of bird flu that has infected some cows.

May 1, 2024
Federal officials are racing to learn more about a strain of bird flu that in recent months jumped to U.S. dairy cattle for the first time.

What to know about the new bird flu outbreak

For the first time, a virulent strain of bird flu has been detected in U.S. dairy cows. Fragments of the virus have also been found in commercial milk. Today, health reporter Lena Sun shares the latest on the outbreak and why the risk to humans remains low.

April 29, 2024

As bird flu spreads in cows, fractured U.S. response has echoes of early covid

Some officials and experts express frustration that more livestock herds aren’t being tested for avian flu.

April 25, 2024
Dairy cows on an Illinois cattle farm April 9.

Bird flu explained: How it spreads, milk and egg safety and more

With traces of bird flu found in cows milk, understand the human risk

April 25, 2024
Eggs are cleaned and disinfected in January at the Sunrise Farms processing plant in Petaluma, Calif., which had seen an outbreak of avian flu. (Terry Chea/AP)

U.S. requires more dairy cows to be tested for bird flu as concerns grow

Dairy cows must be tested for bird flu before moving across state lines under a new federal order, as evidence mounts that the virus is more widespread than feared among American cows.

April 24, 2024
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday that samples of pasteurized milk had tested positive for remnants of the bird flu virus that has infected dairy cows.

Bird flu virus found in grocery milk as officials say supply still safe

The finding does not suggest a threat to human health but indicates the avian flu virus is more widespread among dairy herds than previously thought.

April 23, 2024
Dairy cows in Rockford, Ill., on April 9.

How prepared the U.S. is for a bird flu pandemic

Federal officials are preparing for the possibility of additional human cases of bird flu, testing components to create an H5N1 vaccine after a Texas dairy worker was infected with the highly virulent virus.

April 2, 2024
Cows huddle together at a farm in Texas. Dairy cows in several states, including Texas, have been sickened by bird flu.

Bird flu detected in dairy worker who had contact with infected cattle in Texas

This is the second case of a human sickened by this highly virulent strain of bird flu in the United States, raising questions about whether this pathogen is now more easily transmitted among mammals.

April 1, 2024
Dairy cattle feed at a farm in 2017 near Vado, N.M. Milk from dairy cows in Texas and Kansas has tested positive for bird flu.