Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1999-03, Page 16Robert Mercer BSE and BST a political relationship? I he \tuusta•) of Agriculture. Fisheries and Food in England made a real hash of handling the outhreak of I3S1. in the Late 1980s. \1uch can he learned fn.n► this experience on how not to handle .t disaster situation. In .lune of this year the Puhlic Inquiry in the UK into the outbreak of BSE. will hand down its conclusions. One of the most alarming possibilities of the BSE crisis is that no one knows the correct average incubation period of the human equivalent that has caused the loss of life. The first case of the human deri‘ati‘e mCJD was identified in mid-1995 and deaths from this problem have run at about 10 per year attributed to eating meat from cows infected with BSE. The Public Inquiry in England has heard from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine that such le\els and patterns of disease do not necessarily mean that they cannot increase. If the incubation period of the disease in humans is 20 - 25 years Iand no one knows %\ hat it is) then mane people exposed to the disease could he only halfway through the period at this time. Thus it is possible that a more realistic infection rate has yet to surface. A costly corrective action has now been taken. even if too late for some, but it should have occurred much sooner and with less emotional and financial cost. the inquiry has been told, if information available had been released when requested. It was correct to slaughter animals imported to Canada and it was correct to blitz the industry in the UK when the crunch came. The early delay, however. saw more animals exposed Public opinion played role in BST ban COMM CONSTRUCTION LTD. We do it all - design, engineer & build Broder Barn for Cor Van Tol, Mount Forest. ON Whatever your Building Needs - Big or Small You Know Domm Well Who to Call! • Agricultural • Residential • Commercial IDEAS DOMM WELL BUILT! Phone: 519-665-7848 AYTON Fax: 519-665-7895 12 THE RURAL VOICE w the disease and thus costs mounted and are now estimated close to $5.8 billion (U.S.) by the year 2000. These estimated costs do not include the staggering financial hit taken by the beef and dairy industries from the marketplace. Beef exports to Europe were halted and consumers backed off the product. These exports have recently been resumed, but consumer confidence is not back where it was. As mentioned the costs to human life, the marketplace and the slaughter program could have been much lower, as the Public Inquiry has been told, if MAFF had not been so obstructive and secret about making information available to both private University researchers and the Department of Health. The fact that UK farmers ignored the ban on using cattle feed made from meat and bones of other cows helped prolong the outbreak and spread the incidence of the confirmed cases of BSE. These cases ran as high as 30,000 to 345,000 a year through 1993 and 1994. By 1998 the disease in cattle is reported to be "nearly wiped out" at less than 2000 cases in the first 11 months of the year. What has been learned from the preliminary hearings is that as science and technology increases our knowledge in one aspect, it can diminish our understanding of side effects in another, where technology has not kept pace with the original changes. The final findings from this BSE Inquiry will be pertinent to agriculture worldwide as government policies thrust us towards globalization and free trade. The fact that Canada has turned down the registration of BST for dairy cattle is significant. It may be seen by some as a decision that is more political than scientific but it is still the right decision. This is because the approval process for all animal - related drugs must be cleared by some other agency than that whose function it is to serve the interests of farmers rather than the general public.0 Robert Mercer was editor of the Broadwater Market Letter and a farm commentator in Ontario for 25 years.