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Disposal of Downer Animals

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    Disposal of Downer Animals

    AgWeb News
    General Agriculture News

    12/30/2003
    BSE Situation Brings Downer Animal Issue Back to Forefront
    From Pro Farmer
    Roger Bernard

    The issue of downer animals has come into focus once again, this time driven by the finding of a Holstein cow in Washington state that tested positive for BSE. Several lawmakers are urging that downer animals be excluded from the slaughter mix and now the American Meat Institute and the Food Marketing Institute have weighed in on the issue.

    The Food Marketing Institute (FMI) has sent a letter to USDA Secretary Ann Veneman. In that dispatch, they referenced a July meeting the group had along with the the National Restaurant Association in which they called on USDA to take some specific actions to prevent BSE.

    "Our goal at the time was to enable us to deal with a native case of a BSE by simply telling the public that none of the meat from an infected animal had entered the food supply," FMI said. "That is still our goal and to that end, we are resubmitting our original suggestions now reflecting the current case of BSE in the state of Washington."

    While not wishing to de-emphasize other recommendations the group made, FMI said that two of their plans would have helped deal effectively with the current case. These are:

    All Downer Animals (and other animals that are exhibiting BSE symptoms) should be tested for BSE.
    Any animal that is tested for BSE should be excluded from the human food chain and from use in any animal feed until it is confirmed negative. Such confirmation should be in writing and should clearly indicate the identification of the carcass with the negative test result.
    From the American Meat Institute today comes their perspective on this now-timely topic. The group points out that only a small percentage of cattle that arrive at processing plants "are non-ambulatory or become non-ambulatory during transportation." They note, "Cattle can become non-ambulatory for a variety of reasons: injury like a broken bone, heat stress (from which animals typically recover when given a chance to rest), illness and other factors. Federal veterinarians appropriately examine all livestock before they are processed to determine whether they are fit for human consumption."

    "A very small percentage of animals are deemed 'suspect' by USDA veterinarians for neurological disorders, including BSE," AMI observed. "When animals are neurologically suspect, brain samples are taken and the animal is condemned, meaning it does not enter the food supply." The group notes that it has advised members that they should hold carcasses of any animals tested until the results are completed.

    "Holding carcasses or product pending test results is routine practice in the meat industry," AMI stated. "It is unfortunate that the plant that processed the cow at issue in Washington State released the carcass, but we are confident that beef from the cow is safe because the infectious agent is not contained in muscle cuts like steaks and ground beef."

    AMI and other groups opposed legislation this year that would have required euthanization of non-ambulatory animal arriving at meat plants -- no matter what the cause. AMI said their opposition centered on a view that "it would have hampered the U.S. surveillance system for BSE. Indeed, had this law been in effect, it is unlikely that BSE would have been detected in the cow at issue in Washington State because surveillance occurs at the plant level - not on the farm."

    Eliminating non-ambulatory animals from the slaughter mix may "sound good," AMI said, but they countered that "such a prohibition is not supported by science, would be a waste of perfectly safe beef and would indeed be counter-productive to USDA's BSE surveillance." AMI's preference: "Federal veterinarians should be permitted to exercise their expert judgment in assessing what animals are and are not fit for consumption and the meat industry will cooperate fully as those determinations are made."

    Clearly this issue will remain at the forefront as the BSE situation continues to unfold here in the United States. And the views in the industry and among consumer groups present a divergent view of what should -- or should not -- happen relative to this matter.

    #2
    I heard much the same report about The U.S. not allowing downer cattle into the food chain.

    I agree with this completely! All downer cattle should without question go to the dog food market not our food stores. This is of course unless an animal has clearly had a injury such as a broken leg. Sick cattle do not need to be made into food. If this practice was in place completly we or the states would not be talking about BSE at all.

    Comment


      #3
      As long as those animals that are going for dog food have tested negative for BSE. If not, to the incinerator with them.

      Comment


        #4
        Muttley and 15444 may be you haven't been reading right. Our Abia didn't go into the food chain, but there Hoslten did. And weither the cattle are downers or not they test them for BSE so that if they have it they can go to all the other herds and kill there cattle also. They think this cleans up the problem. You know its like cuting your finger off because it hurt, not looking for the sliver.

        Comment


          #5
          Do dogs get Mad Cow? How about pigs or chickens? I think it takes 3 years to incubate or something so I guess it wouldn't hurt the chickens or feeder pigs?
          If the British cattle herds were so polluted with Mad Cow how come only a very few people got VCJ or whatever it is called? Were those people genetically predisposed to getting it? There was a guy on the Rutherford show yesterday who was talking about Alzheimers and how closely it was related to VCJ. Apparently Alzheimers is caused by an aberrant protein too, but some people are genetically susceptible to it. Whats with all these weird new protein type diseases?

          Comment


            #6
            Things are getting very close to home now with news this AM of the Edmonton Processing Plant potentially being the source of the contaminated feed. I need to know exactly what form this supplement takes and which feed mills were supplied for my own peace of mind.

            On the other hand, if they are able to zero in on this source, and 'in fact' the feed mills had 100% compliance to the ruminant to ruminant feed ban from 1997, one could conclude that only animals over 6 years old would be at risk unless they can show evidence of vertical or horizontal transmission (i.e. passed on the offspring or herd mates). Of those over 6 year-olds, only those that were exposed to these supplements would be at risk. But how to track this?

            Comment


              #7
              You are right Alicia our's never went into the food chain. But there is now two cows in North America that have BSE. I myself believe there could be others, either not yet detected or have gone into the food chain. I am sure that there have been downer or poor cows not yet showing severe symptoms off illness that have been shipped. We may have a good program to protect ourselves but it is only as good as the inspector off the day.

              Comment


                #8
                FDA News
                FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
                P03-55
                July 11, 2003
                Media Inquiries: 301-827-6242
                Consumer Inquiries: 888-INFO-FDA


                U.S. Department of Justice Files Consent Decree Of Permanent Injunction Against X-Cel Feeds, Inc. Based on Violations of FDA's 1997 Animal Feed Rule
                The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) today announced the filing of a Consent Decree of Permanent Injunction against X-Cel, Feeds Inc., and individual officers based on violations of the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act. In the Consent Decree, the Firm and officers admitted liability for introducing adulterated and misbranded animal feeds into interstate commerce and agreed to implement measures to correct the violations under FDA's supervision.

                X-Cel, a feed manufacturer headquartered in Tacoma, Washington, failed to comply with FDA regulations (the 1997 Animal Feed Rule) designed to prevent the establishment and spread of Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE, also known as "Mad Cow Disease") should it ever be found in the United States and FDA regulations concerning the manufacture of medicated feeds.

                "No case of BSE has ever been documented in the U.S., despite aggressive surveillance, said FDA Commissioner Mark B. McClellan, M.D., Ph.D. "FDA's animal feed regulations provide a firewall against BSE, and we are committed to strictly enforcing the rules that protect Americans from this disease."

                The Department of Justice, Civil Division, Office of Consumer Litigation and the United States Attorney's Office of the Western District of Washington filed the Consent Decree in the United States District Court of the Western District in Tacoma, Washington. It permanently enjoins X-Cel from manufacturing animal feeds in violation of the Food Drug and Cosmetic Act and requires the firm, its officers, and employees to take specific steps to avoid future violations including, implementing clean-out procedures, obtaining protein supplier certifications and implementing standard operating procedures for compliance until it satisfies FDA that it has corrected its problems.

                FDA's animal feed regulations protect the United States from the potential threat of BSE by prohibiting the use of certain proteins derived from mammalian tissue in the feed for cattle and other ruminant animals.

                In addition, FDA and the state regulatory agencies have increased the number of inspections of renderers, animal feed manufacturers, and other firms responsible for keeping prohibited mammalian protein out of cattle and other ruminant feed. U.S. industry compliance with the 1997 Animal Feed Rule currently exceeds 99 percent.

                In order to prevent the establishment and spread of BSE in the United States the Animal Feed Rule require animal feed manufacturers to: (1) take measures (including cleaning) to prevent contamination of ruminant feeds with mammalian proteins prohibited in ruminant feeds; (2) maintain sufficient records to track the mammalian proteins prohibited in ruminant feeds through their receipt, processing, and distribution; and (3) label animal feeds that contain mammalian proteins prohibited in ruminant feed with the required cautionary statement "Do not feed to cattle or other ruminants."

                X-Cel and its officers have signed and consented to the filing and entry of the Decree, which will take effect once it has been signed by a judge and entered by the Court.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Cowman, I remember being at a conference a couple of years back and there was this fellow from the U.S. who was talking about the prions in BSE and the link to vCJD. He was saying at that time that there was no way to predict how many more cases would come to see the light of day because they just didn't know enough about this rogue protein i.e. they didn't know how long it could lie dormant for.

                  It will be interesting to see if there is an increase in the occurence of vCJD in the coming years. With all the animals that have had BSE over the past number of years, there remarkably and thankfully have been few cases of this disease. There were over 180,000 cattle in the U.K. alone and in the rest of the globe about 4,300 or so cases, so given that there have been so few relative to the numbers of known infected cattle, I think we have been fortunate overall.

                  Can anyone explain why they would have kept on using downer animals in the human food chain? What was the reason behind it?

                  (Also, could someone tell me what SRM stands for - I know I've seen it, but it's not coming to mind at the moment.)

                  Comment


                    #10
                    SRM is Specified Risk Material - namely brain, spinal cord and one or two other goodies. I wonder if the TV show Fear Factor will face legal action from some of the contestants after they were asked regularily to eat bovine spinal chord - not too smart guys!!

                    Comment


                      #11
                      It seems to me, for all the rhetoric. that there is a whole lot about this disease that we just don't much about. I mean how do two vegetarians get this disease while some of those old English lads were regular old gut eaters and ate the most appalling stuff? I suspect it has a lot to do with genetics?
                      It's just like some people can smoke like a chimney, booze it up with the best, and work in a chemical soup and still be as healthy as a bull. While others live a puritan life and still come up dead from cancer! It has to be in your genetic makeup?

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Cowman
                        I think you are spot on with genetics.

                        I saw a report which said 50% of UK pop were thought to have a total natural imunity to CJD and only a very small percentage would be very suseptable.

                        Did not make headlines though like a single BSE cow in Canada or US.

                        It is the lack of information and the unknown time scales which make this such a problem.

                        Testing is fine in theory but no one really knows yet when or how the infection is passed on. Facts will take many years and probabilities not good enough unless you are sure you are not at risk.

                        There are some real scary senarios on which I will not pontificate.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Maybe we should forget about testing the cows and test the humans! If you are susceptable to Mad Cow you can't eat beef, If you are okay you can eat the whole thing!
                          Just my luck I'd come up susceptable and have to eat that old cardboard chicken the rest of my life! Great...I can't smoke or drink now I'd have to eat that crap! This being healthy is not much fun!

                          Comment

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