ON THE
WSWS
Donate
to
the WSWS!
News Feed
Contact
the
WSWS
Editorial
Board
New
Today
News
& Analysis
Workers
Struggles
Arts
Review
History
Science
Polemics
Philosophy
Correspondence
Archive
About
WSWS
About
the ICFI
Help
Books
Online
OTHER
LANGUAGES
German
French
Italian
Russian
Polish
Czech
Serbo-Croatian
Spanish
Portuguese
Turkish
Sinhala-
Tamil
Indonesian
LEAFLETS
Download
in
PDF format
|
|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Medicine
& Health : BSE/CJD
Growing concern about "Mad Cow Disease" in the US
By Joanne Laurier
2 February 2001
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email
More than 1,200 head of cattle in Texas were quarantined last
week for fear of exposure to bovine spongiform encephalopathy
(BSE), commonly known as mad cow disease. The Food
and Drug Administration (FDA) is investigating whether the feedlot
eaten by the cattle contained meat-and-bone meal made from other
ruminant animals. St. Louis-based Purina Mills Inc. confirmed
that its feed mill in Gonzales, Texas manufactured the questionable
feed.
BSE is the result of cows eating the remains of other infected
animals, particularly brain and spinal cord material. Since 1997
FDA regulations have banned the use of beef byproducts in feed
for cattle or sheep. Purina claimed that the recalled feed was
not intended for the cattle. Cow byproducts are not illegal in
swine and poultry feed. In fact, the use of bovine ingredients,
both domestic and imported, is unregulated for any other application,
such as cosmetics and dietary supplements.
BSE, which emerged in British cattle in the 1980s, has been
spreading and cases of the disease have so far been identified
in 10 European Union (EU) countries, as well as Switzerland and
Liechtenstein. Its human equivalent, variant Creutzfeldt-Jacobs
Disease (vCJD), is a brain-wasting disease with no effective treatment
or cure. The highest concentration of deaths from vCJD has been
in the UK, but Italy and France have recently reported fatalities.
A warning was issued January 26 by the United Nations Food
and Agriculture Organization (FAO) urging all countries, not only
those in Western Europe, to be concerned about the risk of BSE
and vCJD: There is an increasingly grave situation developing
in the European Union, with BSE being identified in cattle in
several member states of the EU which have, until recently, been
regarded as free from the disease. Confirmed and suspected cases
of vCJD are occurring in people outside the UK, in various member
states. According to the UN agency press release: All
countries which have imported cattle or meat and bone meal (MBM)
from western Europe, particularly the UK, during and since the
1980s, can be considered at risk from the disease.
The US government claims it has been erecting a series of firewalls
against the threat of BSE. It has stopped imports of beef from
countries where cows have been diagnosed with BSE, regulated against
the use of cow byproducts in cattle feed and instituted a ban
prohibiting blood donation from anyone who has spent an extended
amount of time in certain European countries. But there are many
loopholes in these preventive efforts. One of the most obvious
is the variety of ways infected material can enter the country.
An example was cited at a recent meeting of an FDA advisory committee:
a package from overseas marked pesticide was found
to contain meat and bone meal intended as a deer-repellent. In
New York City health officials are investigating sales in the
city of a German-made candy recalled in Poland on January 22,
amid fears it contained a beef-based gelatin from BSE-infected
cattle.
Scientist Michael Hansen of Consumers Union, an advocacy group
in Yonkers, New York, says that potentially dangerous meat products
containing brain and spinal cord material from cattle are still
produced and used in this country because they are only banned
in cattle feed. He also points out that the feed ban does not
include blood products, so cow's blood products can be fed
back to cattle. We know infectious material can be found in blood
and plasma. Another indirect route to cattle, he says, is
through pigs: We know cattle can be fed to pigs and pigs
can be fed to cattle. He also suspects that mad cow-like
disease is surfacing in the deer and elk population, and
is concerned about another home-grown malady of the same general
variety, scrapie in sheep.
In addition to the apparent cracks in the regulatory firewalls,
the enforcement of the regulations in place are also at issue.
The FDA reported earlier in January that inspections of rendering
plants and feed mills found nearly a quarter of the sites were
not properly labeling banned animal remains, nor were there measures
in place to keep such material from entering the food chain.
See Also:
BSE/"mad cow disease"
crisis spreads throughout Europe
[23 January 2001]
BSE / CJD
& Food Safety Issues
[WSWS Full Coverage]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |