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Dateline: May 29,
2003
Extension
officials say US beef supplies safe
COLLEGE
STATION – Continuous surveillance efforts throughout the beef industry
have provided assurance that U.S. beef is a safe and nutritious food
source, Texas Cooperative Extension officials said last week.
No
cases of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), widely known as mad cow
disease, have been confirmed in the United States in the past 12 years
with active surveillance at both slaughter firms and on the farm.
“Surveillance
and testing of cows is a good protective measure of keeping our beef
safe,” said Dr. Buddy Faries, Extension program leader for veterinary
medicine. “Any cows that show neurological signs, are weak or thin in
body condition are tested at slaughter. These animals do not enter the
food chain.”
BSE
was reported in Canada Tuesday – the first such reported case in that
country in more than a decade. A cow in Alberta tested positive for the
disease after tests were taken from the cow after slaughter. The meat did
not enter the food chain, Canadian officials said. BSE is found only in
the brain and spinal cord.
Faries
noted some important facts about the surveillance systems and about mad
cow disease:
•
Surveillance systems in the U.S. and in Canada have been in place to
monitor cattle for diseases and unwholesomeness. Surveillance testing
reassures the U.S. beef supply is safe.
•
All cows that show neurological signs, weak or thin body condition are
tested at slaughter. These cows do not enter the food chain.
•
The beef itself isn’t infected with BSE, only the brain and spinal cord.
No evidence of infection is detected in milk or muscle tissue.
•
No brains or spinal cords are ground in hamburger meat in the U.S.
•
Surveillance testing, the ban on feeding ruminant protein to ruminants
(feeding rendered cattle, sheep, goat or deer meat or bone meal back to
beef cattle), and the prohibition on importing animals and meat products
from BSE-affected countries has provided assurance that the U.S. and Texas
will have healthy animals and wholesome meat products.
•
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has closed the border to the
importation of Canadian cattle and meat products.
The
eight-year-old Canadian cow that tested positive for the disease was part
of a 150-head herd. In January, the cow was condemned due to
unwholesomeness on slaughter; and brain tissue was submitted for
laboratory testing under the BSE surveillance program. Tests conducted at
a laboratory in the United Kingdom confirmed infection of BSE in the
cow’s brain after initial tests were run at a Canadian laboratory.
“These
cows are regularly tested and taken out of the food chain,” Faries
explained. “No brains or spinal cords are ground for hamburger here in
the U.S. Continuous surveillance is the means to detect possible cases of
disease like we’ve seen happen in Canada. The is not in the U.S. and is
not likely to occur due to the compliance of the measures currently
enforced by USDA and the Texas Animal Health Commission.”
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