California BSE case proves food safety system works

What is in this article?:

  • While the California dairy cow that tested positive for bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or mad cow disease, made national headlines, University of Georgia livestock and food safety experts say the real story is how well the nation’s food safety system worked.

Four positive tests

Although millions of older and sick cows have been tested since these safety practices have been put in place, only four U.S. cows have tested positive for the disease — one cow imported from Canada to Washington state, one in Texas, one in Alabama and the recent dairy cow in California, Silcox said.

No cow under 30 months of age has ever been found to be carrying the disease, he said.

“When you go into the grocery store, all the steak and roasts there come from relatively young animals,” he said. “We have never seen a cow test positive for BSE which was less than 30 months old.”

The precautions taken by the USDA, FDA and the international food safety and agriculture communities have nearly eradicated BSE from cattle populations over the last 20 years, Silcox said.

With only 29 cases of BSE reported worldwide in 2011, the specter of the disease is now one of its greatest impacts.

The recent announcement disrupted the cattle futures market, but it later rebounded. “This one wasn’t even going to end up in the food supply, and the beef futures market still dropped, but of course any news about beef can disrupt the futures market,” Silcox said.

The case will not affect beef exports to trade partners like Mexico or Japan that already require imported beef to be harvested before the cows reach 30 or 20 months of age, Silcox said.

What you should know about BSE:

• The USDA announced a positive test result for BSE in a central California dairy cow on April 24 as part of its targeted surveillance program to test cattle for bovine spongiform encephalopathy.

• According to the USDA, the carcass of the animal is being held under state authority at a rendering facility in California and will be destroyed. It was never presented for slaughter for human consumption, so at no time presented a risk to the food supply or human health.

• The bottom line for consumers remains the same: U.S. beef is safe because of multiple, interlocking safeguards instituted over the past two decades. The BSE agent is not found in meat like steaks and roasts. It is only found in central nervous system tissue such as the brain and spinal cord, which are not allowed for use in food products.

• BSE is fast approaching eradication worldwide. According to the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) there were only 29 cases of BSE worldwide in 2011, which is a 99 percent reduction since the peak in 1992 of more than 37,300 cases.

This is only the fourth case of BSE in the U.S., compared to more than 37,000 cases in the United Kingdom alone during peak occurrence in 1992.

• USDA’s ongoing BSE surveillance program tests approximately 40,000 high-risk cattle annually, bringing the total of tested animals to more than 1 million since the program began. A scientific analysis of seven years of surveillance data found the estimated prevalence of BSE in the U.S. to be less than one infected animal per 1 million adult cattle.

• USDA Public Health Veterinarians examine every single animal before processing and condemn those with any signs of illness. Animals most likely to have BSE are older animals either unable to walk or showing signs of neurological disease. Such animals are banned from the human food supply.

Discuss this Article 3

Anonymous
on May 7, 2012

once again, the mad cow system has FAILED.

but yet, with a good PR machine, you can spin anything bad, into something good $$$

but let's look at the science shall we ;

It is important to reiterate here, even though this animal did not enter the food chain, the fact that the USA now finds mad cow disease in samplings of 1 in 40,000 is very disturbing, and to add the fact that it was an atypical L-type BASE BSE, well that is very disturbing in itself. 1 out of 40,000, would mean that there were around 25 mad cows in the USA annually going by a National herd of 100 million (which now I don’t think the USA herd is that big), but then you add all these disturbing factors together, the documented link of sporadic CJD cases to atypical L-type BASE BSE, the rise in sporadic CJD cases in the USA of a new strain of CJD called ‘classification pending Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease’ cpCJD, in young and old, with long duration of clinical symptoms until death. the USA has a mad cow problem and have consistently covered it up. it’s called the SSS policy. ...

so, USDA et al accidently find two atypical mad cows in Texas and Alabama during the infamous enhanced BSE cover up back in 2004 and 2005, and then shut the testing down to numbers so low, it’s almost impossible to find another mad cow case, unless your country is to a point that mad cow disease can be found in 1 in 40,000, and STILL FIND MAD COW DISEASE. partial and voluntary BSE mad cow feed ban of August 4, 1997 was nothing more than ink on paper, with as much as 10,000,000 LBS. of blood laced meat and bone meal MBM going out into commerce 10 years later in 2007. who knows since 2007 breach, fda et al stopped posting those warning letters. ARS said if atypical BSE was more virulent, SRM removal would have to change if tissue infectivity was found differently than c-BSE. it was. more virulent and infectivity was found in more tissues, including skeletal muscle. HOUSTON, WE HAVE A PROBLEM. ...

I am deeply disturbed about the false and terribly misleading information that is being handed out by the USDA FDA et al about this recent case of the atypical L-type BASE BSE case in California. these officials are terribly misinformed (I was told they are not lying), about the risk factor and transmissibility of the atypical L-type BASE BSE. along with the USDA et al, the media is following through with these lies. these are very disturbing transmission studies that the CDC PUT OUT IN 2012. I urge officials to come forward with the rest of this story.

please see ;

MAD COW USDA ATYPICAL L-TYPE BASE BSE, the rest of the story...

***Oral Transmission of L-type Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy in Primate Model

http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/18/1/pdfs/11-1092.pdf

***Infectivity in skeletal muscle of BASE-infected cattle

http://www.neuroprion.org/resources/pdf_docs/conferences/prion2009/prion...

***feedstuffs- It also suggests a similar cause or source for atypical BSE in these countries.

http://www.neuroprion.org/resources/pdf_docs/conferences/prion2009/prion...

***Also, a link is suspected between atypical BSE and some apparently sporadic cases of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans.

http://www.neuroprion.org/en/np-neuroprion.html

full text ;

atypical L-type BASE BSE

http://transmissiblespongiformencephalopathy.blogspot.com/2012/04/update...

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

BSE MAD COW LETTERS TO USDA (Tom Vilsack, Secretary of Agriculture) and FDA (Magaret Hamburg, Commissioner of FDA) May 1, 2012

http://transmissiblespongiformencephalopathy.blogspot.com/2012/05/bse-ma...

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

ARS FLIP FLOPS ON SRM REMOVAL FOR ATYPICAL L-TYPE BASE BSE RISK HUMAN AND ANIMAL HEALTH

http://transmissiblespongiformencephalopathy.blogspot.com/2012/05/ars-fl...

Friday, May 4, 2012

May 2, 2012: Update from APHIS Regarding a Detection of Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) in the United States

http://transmissiblespongiformencephalopathy.blogspot.com/2012/05/may-2-...

http://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=APHIS-2008-0010-0008

http://www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=APHIS-2008-0010

Sunday, March 11, 2012

APHIS Proposes New Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy Import Regulations in Line with International Animal Health Standards Proposal Aims to Ensure Health of the U.S. Beef Herd, Assist in Negotiations

http://transmissiblespongiformencephalopathy.blogspot.com/2012/03/aphis-...

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy; Importation of Bovines and Bovine Products APHIS-2008-0010-0008 RIN:0579-AC68

http://transmissiblespongiformencephalopathy.blogspot.com/2012/04/bovine...

TSS

Paul Felix Schott (not verified)
on May 7, 2012

Let’s take out all the Artificial Colors and Flavors that are a danger to us all,
not to think about all the Dangerous Food Preservatives. The health risks that we
all pay should be enough to teach all Leaders to stop it. You want lower health
cost start with the number one cause of 90% of the problems chemical ingredients
drugs. Let our children eat good food not the man made chemical ingredients and
drugs found in many processed foods.
Take soda pop out of all schools and put back in Nutrition Whole Milk. 90% of all
the Olympic Athletes gold medalists drink Whole MILK.
i have been drinking half and half milk cream since 1964 and can brake three
2 by 4's in less than a second and a half. i have good strong bones thanks to milk
and GOD.

USA Leaders others countries started to put a end to chemical ingredients and drugs
a while ago what are we waiting for the Drug CEO's and Drug Cartels to approve it?

The Lord's Little Helper
Paul Felix Schott

Global Health Care Company Abbott Laboratories Inc. has pleaded guilty and agreed to pay $1.5 billion to resolve its criminal and civil liability arising from the company’s unlawful promotion of the prescription drug Depakote for uses not approved as safe and effective by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the Justice Department announced today. The resolution – the second largest payment by a drug company – includes a criminal fine and forfeiture totaling $700 million and civil settlements with the federal government and the states totaling $800 million. Abbott also will be subject to court-supervised probation and reporting obligations for Abbott’s CEO and Board of Directors.

Abbott Labs to Pay $1.5 Billion to Resolve Criminal & Civil Investigations of Off-label Promotion of Depakote
05/07/2012 01:08 PM EDT

Helane Shields (not verified)
on May 10, 2012

The US Deptl of Agriculture and Centers for Disease Control are deceiving the public about the true risks of mad cow prion diseases:

Alzheimer's Disease (AD) and sporadic Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease (sCJD)
are sister prion diseases (like mad cow), transmissible, infectious by aerosols, medical
equipment, (scopes, etc.) dental and eye equipment, blood, urine, feces,
saliva, mucous Doctors frequently misdiagnose AD and sCJD one for the other. The symptoms and
neuropathology are almost identical.

"The prion-like behavior implicated in Alzheimer's disease also suggests that it may be transmissible like mad cow disease."

""Our findings open the possibility that some of the sporadic Alzheimer's cases may arise from an infectious process," senior author Claudia Soto said in a statement in October. "

http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/336322/20120502/alzheimer-s-trigger-caus...

Amyloid plaques are found in the brains of BASE mad cows, chronic wasting disease deer, AD and sCJD victims.

Out of over one million downer cows each year - the ones most likely to be infected - only 5000
are tested for mad cow disease.

Discovery of the fourth US mad cow makes clear the pathway of risk - how AD (and other prion disease victims) get infected:

Many aging asymptomatic dairy cows enter the food chain even though they are actually sub clinically infected with BASE - atypical Bovine Amyloidotic Spongiform Encephalopathy. (Three of the four US mad cows were afflicted with the atypical BASE strain.)

The UNTESTED BASE mad dairy cows, which end up in huge
industrial mixing vats of hamburger, each containing meat from
50 to 100 animals from multiple states and two to four countries, may be the route of human
prion disease infection (AD). http://www.organicconsumers.org/madcow/burger21904.cfm "

The potentially BASE infected hamburger is distributed in supermarkets and fast food restaurants coast to coast.

There are 6 million victims of the Alzheimer's/prion disease epidemic, with a new case every 69 seconds. http://www.alzheimers-prions.com/

Helane Shields, Alton, NH hshields@tds.net

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