I'll second the Joe Rogan Podcast referenced earlier in this thread. It is excellent and contains a lot of information.
The Meat Eater podcast with Steve Rinella also has an episode on CWD with the same biologist I believe, and it was also excellent.
Norway is experimenting with the eradication of a CWD positive reindeer herd. If I remember right, they are culling the infected herd and monitoring the area for a few years (3?) to ensure that no other deer enter the area. I think the results of this trial will have some pretty big implications on how CWD is dealt with in the future.
From what I recall, like creutzfeldt jakob disease, CWD has an incubation period where it can be undetectable even though it is present within the deer. Humans can have CJD for 40 or 50 years before they start to have symptoms. To me, this means that even though a deer looks healthy, if CWD has been found in your area, it's a roll of the dice.
Also, I believe that there were cases of CJD in the UK that could possibly be linked to the mad cow outbreak a few years ago. All of these are types of spongiform encephalopathy so they do the same thing to the brain. To me, this means that CWD 'could' at some point be picked up by humans, but from what I've heard from biologists it's unlikely.
They've begun testing for CWD in the unit that I hunt, but it hasn't been detected. However, it's been detected in the next adjacent county in Wyoming. I tend to think it's not already in my unit, it will be within the next decade or two unless they can come up with something to stop it. When that day comes, I will check my deer at check stations if they are open, but will likely continue to eat them as long as they looked healthy when I shot them.
In my opinion, just being alive in this 21st century is far more hazardous than anything that a deer could do to me. I'm sure that if I don't die in a car wreck tomorrow, global warming or lung cancer will get me sooner or later.