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Meat of Infected Cow Found in More States
News-Journal ^ | 12/28/2003 | AP

Posted on 12/28/2003 9:03:31 AM PST by yonif

WASHINGTON (AP)--Investigators disclosed Sunday that they have found meat cut from a Holstein sick with mad cow disease was sent to four more states and one territory.

Dr. Kenneth Petersen, an Agriculture Department veterinarian, said investigators have now determined that some of the meat from the cow slaughtered Dec. 9 went to Alaska, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana and Guam. Earlier, officials had said most of the meat went to Washington and Oregon, with lesser amounts to California and Nevada, for distribution to consumers.

He stressed, though, that the parts most likely to carry the infection--the brain, spinal cord and lower intestine--were removed before the meat from the infected cow was cut and processed for human consumption.

``The recalled meat represents essentially zero risk to consumers,'' Petersen said.

Although federal officials maintain the food supply is safe, they have recalled as a precaution an estimated 10,000 pounds of meat from the infected cow and from 19 other cows all slaughtered Dec. 9 at Vern's Moses Lake Meat Co., in Moses Lake, Wash.

Petersen, of the department's Food Safety and Inspection Service, said the department still is recovering meat and won't know if all of it has been returned until later this week.

Officials say the slaughtered cow was deboned at Midway Meats in Centralia, Wash., and sent Dec. 12 to two other plants, Willamette Valley Meat and Interstate Meat, both near Portland, Ore.

Petersen has said that much of the meat is being held by those facilities.

Petersen said Willamette also received beef trimmings--parts used in meats such as hamburger. He said those trimmings were sold to some three dozen small, Asian and Mexican facilities in Washington, Oregon, California and Nevada.

In response, representatives from supermarket chains in the West _ Albertsons, Fred Meyer, Safeway and WinCo Foods have voluntarily removed ground beef products from the affected distributors. Safeway has said it will look for another supplier.

Mad cow disease, known as bovine spongiform encephalopathy, is a concern because humans who eat brain or spinal matter from an infected cow can develop variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. In Britain, 143 people died of it after an outbreak of mad cow in the 1980s.

Despite assurances that meat is safe, Japan, the top importer of American beef, and more than two dozen countries have blocked U.S. beef imports. Jordan joined the list on Sunday. U.S. beef industry officials estimated this week that they've lost 90 percent of their export market. Ranchers export 10 percent of the beef they produce.

U.S. agriculture officials arrived Sunday in Japan to discuss maintaining beef trade even as the United States investigates how the Holstein in Washington state got mad cow disease.

Dr. Ron DeHaven, the department's chief veterinarian, said on Saturday that investigators have tentatively traced the first U.S. cow with mad cow disease to Canada. This could help determine the scope of the outbreak and might even limit the economic damage to the American beef industry.

The tentative conclusion traced the diseased cow to the province of Alberta, where Canada had found another case of mad cow infection last May.

However, DeHaven re-emphasized Sunday that investigators aren't certain of that because U.S. records outlining the animal's history do not match ones in Canada. Canadian officials had complained it was premature to reach any firm conclusion.

DeHaven said Sunday that DNA tests were being arranged to help resolve the matter.

Canadian papers show the cow had two calves before it was exported to the United States, contrary to U.S. documents which classified the animal as a heifer when it arrived, meaning it had never born calves.

Also, according to Canadian documents, the diseased cow was 6 1/2-years-old--older than U.S. officials had thought. U.S. records say the cow was 4- or 4 1/2-years-old.

Officials are concerned about the cow's age because it may have been born before the United States and Canada in 1997 banned certain feed that is considered the most likely source of infection.

A cow gets infected by eating feed containing tissue from the spine or brain of an infected animal. Farmers used to feed their animals such meal to fatten them.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Culture/Society; Extended News
KEYWORDS: beef; cows; farms; health; infection; madcow; meat
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To: yonif
MyWayNews offers the same article but with the following additional paragraphs.

The Food and Drug Administration is trying to find out if the cow ate contaminated feed - a difficult task because the animal may have gotten the disease from feed it ate years before it appeared sick. The disease has an incubation period of four or five years.

Dr. Stephen Sundlof, head of the FDA's Center for Veterinary Medicine, said that an animal could get sick if it eats a little bit of infected material, as little as half a gram.

"Even if a small amount amount of brain or central nervous system (material) were to get into cattle feed, there is the potential for even that very small dose to result in the disease," Sundlof said.

Sundlof said officials are less certain about how much would infect a human. "It's not known what dose would infect humans, but it would higher for humans than for cattle," he said.

Investigators have considered other ways the disease could spread. Although scientists have never found a case of mad cow infection being passed from a mother cow to its calf, they want to test the sick cow's calves for the disease as a precaution.

My questions: How can Sundlof possibly know this (i.e. "... half a gram")? What is the basis for his statement?

81 posted on 12/28/2003 11:08:07 AM PST by Phaedrus
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To: cynicom
Yeah but how would you know if a chicken had it?!!!!!
They could ALL have mad cow already......
82 posted on 12/28/2003 11:10:31 AM PST by AmericanDave (Remove)
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To: sciencediet
I don't know, but I AM getting sick just reading thru this thread..

My relatives eat TRIPE, which is the lining cow's stomach... I suppose that is safe?

I'm not touching a hot dog, or potted meat, or spam..or even a T-Bone steak cut because it's supposed to be closest to the contamination area of the cow.

sw

83 posted on 12/28/2003 11:10:46 AM PST by spectre (Spectre's wife)
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To: .38sw
It explains why Stockton is the Crime Capital of California...
84 posted on 12/28/2003 11:15:30 AM PST by tubebender (Don't believe anything you hear and only half of what you see...)
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To: LaraCroft; WhyisaTexasgirlinPA
"Can you get Mad Cow from licking off your lipstick?"

Only if you kiss cows with a certain shade of red.


85 posted on 12/28/2003 11:18:01 AM PST by TexasCowboy (COB1)
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To: tubebender
I thought Oakland was the crime capitol of the world.
86 posted on 12/28/2003 11:21:37 AM PST by .38sw
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To: Djarum
I don't think they are supposed to accept 'downers', but some do anyway.

The vast majority of downers are just that - can't walk. Old, broken leg, etc. I can't imagine a house taking a cow that's foaming at the mouth or otherwise suffering from a disease.

They test for this by checking it's reflexes.

Can errors be made? Well, we just learned that they can. Did the industry get a wake up call from hell? You betcha. I think it would be a massive competitive advantage to "sell safety" by earning credibility with the public.

Remember how Intel recalled all early Pentium chips even though there was a virtually no chance of the error affecting anybody? It wasn't about chips - but rather trust and integrity. Andy Grove, Intel's CEO at the time, called this, a "Strategic Inflection Point". It probably saved the company and neutralized a whole squadron of trial lawyers that were fixing to feast on Intel's misfortune.

I'm not expecting the beef industry to recall every beef product, but they need to do a little more than just the government minimums. And then they need to communicate how well they do their job to the public. After all, lose their trust and you're outta business. As it stands, they're going to lose a bunch.

I, on the other hand, will enjoy a respite from record prices as a beef consumer.

87 posted on 12/28/2003 11:23:02 AM PST by Rate_Determining_Step (US Military - Draining the Swamp of Terrorism since 2001!)
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To: LaraCroft
Don't forget gelatin as in Jello.

88 posted on 12/28/2003 11:26:23 AM PST by meatloaf
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To: yonif
But....but....have we stopped beef imports from Canada?

Leni

89 posted on 12/28/2003 11:28:22 AM PST by MinuteGal (Register now for FReeps Ahoy 3". Fun and fellowship with freepers from across the U.S. A !)
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To: spectre
They say the brain and spinal cord are the most dangerous which may mean that BSE is predominant in the nervous system.

I'm eating steak and will continue to do so. Since BSE takes 20 years to show up, what's the sense stopping eating beef now? We may already have it.

I don't go the track or casino or buy lottery tickets, but subtract the numbers of beef stock destroyed in UK with the number of human victims and you'll realize you have better odds of winning the lottery than getting Mad Cow.

So eat steak and buy lottery tickets. If you win the lottery buy your own herd.

90 posted on 12/28/2003 11:29:34 AM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: cynicom
Until you find out that beef offal is fed to chickens and chicken waste is fed to ..... cattle. The law only restricts byproducts from mammalian sources from being fed to cattle.

Chickens aren't mammals.
91 posted on 12/28/2003 11:31:03 AM PST by meatloaf
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To: sweetliberty
There was a case in Italy of a man and his cat that both died of spongioform encephalopathy.
92 posted on 12/28/2003 11:31:50 AM PST by Toskrin
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To: meatloaf
Ain't mammals???? Golleeeee.
93 posted on 12/28/2003 11:33:46 AM PST by cynicom
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To: Rebelbase; MeeknMing; nopardons; potlatch; PhilDragoo; Mia T; Ragtime Cowgirl; Alamo-Girl; ...
Agricultural meat products increase in cost over time just as average incomes have since WWII.

Unlike some products like computers and basic electronics made abroad which dropped as technology and production methods improved.

Compare the price of an new 2004 Ford Mustang to that of a 1965 Ford Mustang.

Economics and finance is not determined by emotion or personal desire.

Both the cattle business and automobile industry are labor and material intensive.

In New York City there are people with incomes of over a million dollars a year paying under $600 a month for a large 3 bedroom rent controlled apartment in Manhattan.

That same apartment in Connecticut would be well over $2000 a month and in North Carolina over $1500 a month.

Yet the average income in North Carolina is much lower than in NYC.

You are wishing for Socialist price controls on beef like New Yorkers have on housing.

Note New York liberals are not demanding wage and salary controls close to those levels of 40 years ago.

You have a hidden touch of Socialism and Oz mixed in.

Check the increases of income compared to food prices on charts that go back to WWII.

Compare food increases to real estate home price increases.

Compare food increases to automotive price increases.

Compare the relative amount spent on food in the USA to that in Europe today spent as a % of income.
94 posted on 12/28/2003 11:34:18 AM PST by autoresponder (SLICK http://0access.tripod.com/legacy.html OLDIES BG MUSIC: http://0access.tripod.com/slick.html)
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To: Battle Axe
jello
95 posted on 12/28/2003 11:35:15 AM PST by VeritatisSplendor
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To: TexasCowboy

Baby, baby, baby...


96 posted on 12/28/2003 11:37:57 AM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: MinuteGal
"But....but....have we stopped beef imports from Canada?"

No, I just sent Bill and Hillary a couple of Canadian ribeyes.

97 posted on 12/28/2003 11:38:24 AM PST by TexasCowboy (COB1)
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To: Psycho_Runner
Thanks. I needed that.
98 posted on 12/28/2003 11:43:33 AM PST by Dr. Eckleburg (There are very few shades of gray.)
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To: Gelato; All
I'll repeat your good question.

Since this was a dairy cow, what are the risks to the milk supply?

99 posted on 12/28/2003 11:48:13 AM PST by Dr. Eckleburg (There are very few shades of gray.)
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To: Dr. Eckleburg
I'll see your question and add one:

When they were in serious trouble, UK banned offal from steak & Kidney pies, etc., and I've gotten differing definitions of offal. Here is an Offal Recipe Page and it refers to calves liver, kidneys, organ meats. How dangerous are those compared to the brain and spinal cord threat?

100 posted on 12/28/2003 11:59:49 AM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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