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WSWS : News
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: Britain
British government warns variant CJD deaths may rise to 250,000
By Julie Hyland
3 November 2000
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The Blair government has warned that variant Creutzfeldt Jacobs
Disease (vCJD), caused by eating beef infected with "mad
cow disease" (BSE-Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy) could
claim as many as 250,000 lives. This is double the previous estimate
of 136,000 possible deaths and means that the government is now
working on a "worst case scenario" of one in every 250
people in Britain dying from the disease.
Variant CJD is a fatal brain wasting disease beginning typically
with depressive-type symptoms, lack of coordination and unspecified
pains, before progressing to complete helplessness, blindness
and certain death. As yet there is no proven means of arresting
the disease's progress, let alone curing it.
The revised estimate was made public just days after Judge
Lord Phillips published the final report of the government-convened
inquiry into BSE. After a two-year investigation, Phillips' report
did not make any criticisms of the food industry, whose practices
lie at the heart of the scandal, or of former government ministers,
despite acknowledging their efforts to cover-up the crisis.
Phillips conclusion that no one could be held responsible for
the worst food health disaster in Britain was not surprising.
The incoming Labour government, which convened the Inquiry in
1997, intended it mainly as a means of defusing public anger over
a crisis that had played a significant role in eroding support
for the previous Conservative government.
The official BSE report was followed by the announcement that
the Labour government would ensure a care and compensation package
to the families of those who died. Agriculture Secretary Nick
Brown, speaking on BBC TV's Breakfast with Frost programme,
admitted that the number of people who will die from vCJD could
grow "much, much larger". He summed up official indifference
to the terrible fate that could befall many families by claiming
the numbers were "just predictions", whilst taking the
opportunity to promote the British beef industry. "I eat
British beef, I know British beef is amongst the safest in the
world," Brown stated.
Also speaking to the BBC, Professor John Collinge, of the BSE
Advisory Committee, took issue with the "false optimism and
wishful thinking, which has bedevilled", the BSE investigation
"for too long." "We might be seeing an epidemic
that involves hundreds of thousands of people. Let's hope that's
not the case, but it's still possible", he said.
Putting the risks into context, microbiologist and leading
CJD expert Dr Stephen Dealler said on average people in the UK
had eaten 50 meals made from the tissue of an infected animal.
"At the moment the number of cases of CJD we are seeing are
doubling every year. If they double for a long time then the numbers
are in millions, if they double for just a few years then the
numbers are in thousands. At the moment it is very difficult to
know," Dealler said. The Report from the official BSE Inquiry
found that a cow could be infected with BSE by eating contaminated
material the size of a peppercorn.
Government adviser Professor Roy Anderson said that news that
a 74-year old man had died from vCJD last yearmost known
victims have been youngernecessitated a major re-evaluation
of the possible scale of the crisis. Anderson's earlier computer
predictions had forecast that up to 6,000 people had been infected
between 1980 and 1996. That figure could now rise as high as 130,000
as there is concern that many elderly people with vCJD could have
been wrongly diagnosed as suffering from Alzheimer's disease,
which has similar symptoms.
Fears of a vCJD epidemic have also been heightened by news
that a cluster pattern of cases may be occurring in a former South
Yorkshire mining village. Accountant Sarah Roberts, 28, of Armthorpe,
Doncaster, died in September only nine weeks after she was diagnosed
with vCJD. Her former neighbour and friend Matthew Parker, 19,
who attended the same school, died of vCJD in 1997.
It has now been revealed that a third victim of vCJD, former
RAF policeman Adrian Hodgkinson, 25, had made regular visits to
Armthorpe to see his grandmother every weekend between 1972 and
1986. If a link is proven it would indicate that the three victims
may have been infected by the same source. The CJD surveillance
unit at Edinburgh University is exploring the possible link. If
Doncaster does reveal a cluster it will be the second such grouping
in Britain. Last month, a fifth person in the Leicestershire village
of Queniborough died from suspected vCJD, following the deaths
of four others who had lived there or had connections with the
village.
Despite this, Prime Minister Blair continued to claim that
the issue was one of "finding the balance between risk and
public protection measures". This is a "cost-effective"
approach, which argues that any regulatory measures that may interfere
with profits are only justifiable when a certain death toll has
been reached. This was the argument utilised by the Conservative
government when BSE first emerged in order to reject intervention
into the food industry on the grounds that the risk to public
health was "minimal". So for example, when the government
was working previously on a "central figure" of 6,000
deaths from vCJD it was not considered cost-effective to extend
the ban on feeding cannibalised remains to livestock or introduce
further safety measures, for fear of outraging major land and
food interests. These had already reacted angrily to even banning
the sale of beef on the bone, claiming it represented a serious
threat to civil liberties.
Even now, faced with a mountain of evidence showing the link
between BSE in cattle and vCJD in humans, there are those who
still view the BSE crisis as a virtual conspiracy against the
British beef industry. An editorial in the Daily Telegraph
last week fulminated, While it is still unclear whether
77 horrible vCJD deaths are connected with the BSE crisis, other
disasters can be directly relate to the whole affair, chief among
them the extremist ban of beef on the bone and the collapse of
the British beef industry.
It is a sign of how reluctant the government has been to enforce
the necessary safety measures in the food industry that only now
is it considering introducing a complete ban on feeding animal
remains to other animalsa major factor in the rapid spread
of BSE in cattle. As yet the current ban on feeding recycled meat
and bone meal does not cover many animals including pigs, poultry
and fish or the use of cows' blood in feed manufacture because
blood was deemed free of the infective prions associated with
BSE.
The Food Standards Agency (FSA) made the recommendation to
extend the ban after scientists proved in laboratory tests that
BSE could be transferred to sheep. Although there is yet no evidence
of BSE infecting sheep in the field, there are concerns that it
could be masked by scrapie, a disease that has similar symptoms
and has been present in the national flock for 200 years without
apparently proving any risk to humans. Many scientists believe
that BSE originated as a mutation of scrapie after it crossed
the species barrier between sheep and cows through the ingestion
of cannibalised remains in feed or shared grazing land. An FSA
spokesman said urgent screening was required to establish any
risk, but this would take years to reach any conclusion. In the
meantime, the Ministry of Agriculture is to draw up contingency
plans for dealing with any future discovery of BSE in sheep, including
a blanket ban on consumption and the slaughter of millions of
animals.
See Also:
Labour's
Official Inquiry into BSE/Mad Cow Disease finds no one to blame
[31 October 2000]
BSE
inquiry delivers report as scientists raise fresh concerns about
"mad cow disease"
[3 October 2000]
BSE/CJD
& Food Saftey Issues
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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