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SENATE WANTS TO KEEP
DOWNED CATTLE OUT OF FOOD SUPPLY
CIDRAP (Center for Infectious Disease Research &
Policy) News, Robert Roos, Nov 10, 2003 Academic Health
Center -- University of Minnesota
In an effort to ensure that sick cattle are kept out
of the food supply, the Senate last week approved a
measure to bar the Department of Agriculture (USDA)
from approving the use of "downed" animals
for human consumption.
Sen. Daniel Akaka, D-Hi., offered the measure to prevent
"inhumane and improper treatment" of animals
that are too sick to stand or walk. "Stronger legislation
is needed to ensure that these animals do not enter
our food chain," Akaka said in a statement. "My
amendment prevents downed animals from being approved
for consumption at our dinner tables."
Akaka's measure was an amendment to the fiscal year
2004 agricultural appropriations bill, H.R. 2673. The
amendment, which was approved Nov 5 on a voice vote,
bars the USDA from using fiscal 2004 funds to approve
downed animals for human consumption. The House turned
down a similar amendment on a 202-199 vote when it passed
its version of the USDA appropriations bill, according
to the Associated Press (AP). The fate of the measure
will depend on negotiations in a House-Senate conference
committee.
"Many of these animals are dying from infectious
diseases and present a significant pathway for the spread
of disease," Akaka said. He voiced particular concern
about bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), or mad
cow disease. Eating meat products from BSE-infected
cattle is believed to be the cause of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease in humans.
Current USDA policies are designed to keep sick animals
out of the food supply, according to Steve Cohen, a
spokesman for the USDA's Food Safety and Inspection
Service (FSIS). "Under no circumstances would an
animal that shows clinical signs of illness be allowed
to enter the food chain, whether that animal could walk
or not," Cohen told CIDRAP News. USDA veterinarians
at all slaughter plants assess the condition of cattle
brought to the plants, Cohen said. "If upon examination
they [the vets] see any signs of illness, that animal
is not allowed to go to slaughter," he said. Inspectors
also check carcasses and condemn any that show signs
of disease, he added.
Cohen said nonambulatory cows can be approved for food
use if they show no signs of illness, which can happen
with injured animals. "A lot of them are older
dairy cows that have either hip or leg injuries,"
he explained. "Sometimes they have accidental slips
in transportation, and that's why a lot of our inspection
takes place in the transport vehicle itself, so that
the animal doesn't suffer when being moved."
Cohen couldn't say how many nonambulatory cattle turn
up at slaughter plants each year or how many are used
for food. The AP report said the USDA has estimated
that 130,000 downed animals are slaughtered annually.
Akaka said it's not possible to distinguish BSE from
many other diseases by simple inspection. "Consequently,
BSE-infected cattle can be approved for human and animal
consumption," he asserted.
Will Hueston, DVM, director of the University of Minnesota's
Center for Animal Health and Food Safety in St. Paul,
agreed that BSE has no unique clinical signs that make
it easily recognizable. Consquently, he said, there
is a theoretical risk that a BSE-infected cow could
end up food, though no BSE cases have been seen in the
United States. "If we had BSE, an animal that [had
the disease and] was unable to move because of a broken
leg and showed no signs of disease, no fever or abnormal
behavior, could enter the food chain," Hueston
said.
He added, "I wouldn't go too far down that line,
though," because the USDA's surveillance program
for BSE focuses largely on downed cattle, which are
among the cattle at highest risk. In fiscal year 2003
(which ended Sep 30), the agency's Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service (APHIS) tested 20,277 cattle
for BSE, including 16,560 downed cattle, according to
information on the agency's Web site. The carcasses
of tested animals are held until the test results are
in.
In BSE-affected countries, high-risk tissues, including
the brain and spinal cord, are removed from all adult
cattle at the time of slaughter to guard against the
risk of invisible BSE cases entering the food chain,
Hueston noted. The abnormal prion proteins associated
with BSE have not been found in muscle tissues used
as meat.
Cattle that are condemned as unfit for human consumption
are sent for rendering, in which the carcass is cooked
to remove water and separate fat from protein, Hueston
said. The fat and protein are used in pet food, feed
for animals other than cattle or other ruminants, and
various other products. As a precaution against BSE,
material from ruminants cannot legally be fed to ruminants.
See also:
Sen. Akaka's news release
http://akaka.senate.gov/~akaka/releases/03/11/2003B06340.html
APHIS information on BSE surveillance program
http://www.aphis.usda.gov/lpa/issues/bse/bse-surveillance.html
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