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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: sciencediet

121 posted on 12/28/2003 2:40:29 PM PST by MeekOneGOP (Hillary is a TRAITOR !!: http://Richard.Meek.home.comcast.net/HitlerTraitor6.JPG)
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To: sciencediet

122 posted on 12/28/2003 2:42:13 PM PST by MeekOneGOP (Hillary is a TRAITOR !!: http://Richard.Meek.home.comcast.net/HitlerTraitor6.JPG)
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To: Thinkin' Gal
I think what is meant is that meat from the infected cow may have been mixed in with the meat of many other cows; such as the way McDonald's produces their hamburger patties, in huge mixing vats. Read Fast Food Nation.
123 posted on 12/28/2003 2:42:13 PM PST by handk (That's why I'm cheesy... I'm cheesy like macaroni...)
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To: LaraCroft
Jello!
124 posted on 12/28/2003 2:45:00 PM PST by Domestic Church (AMDG...)
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To: WhyisaTexasgirlinPA; sciencediet
There's a lot of playing with words on this thread.....
125 posted on 12/28/2003 2:55:37 PM PST by TexasCowboy (COB1)
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To: CommandoFrank
Jello is another by-product of beef.
126 posted on 12/28/2003 2:57:26 PM PST by varina davis
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To: MeeknMing

I almost ran into a car-eating cow on the way to the steakhouse. Shoulda stayed home and had beer


127 posted on 12/28/2003 3:09:41 PM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: Battle Axe
I think there should be grades for the downers. Meat that is suspected of being contaminated with MCD shouldn't be fed to even dogs or cats. Like another poster said: burn it.
128 posted on 12/28/2003 3:14:10 PM PST by Djarum
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To: Battle Axe
The procedure for slaughtering animals is to cut their carcasses in half with something close to a chainsaw. They just go down the line and cut them in two. [...] I would not be so worried about the brains or the lower intestines, those things would have only a few homes, but it's the spinal cord that I worry about.

If they cut the animal in half with a chainsaw, then enters the possibility of spinal-cord material getting on the chainsaw and being splattered all over the carcass

129 posted on 12/28/2003 3:17:00 PM PST by SauronOfMordor (Nine out of the ten voices in my head told me to stay home and clean my guns today)
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To: sciencediet
LOL !


Beer is Good for you!


130 posted on 12/28/2003 3:24:52 PM PST by MeekOneGOP (Hillary is a TRAITOR !!: http://Richard.Meek.home.comcast.net/HitlerTraitor6.JPG)
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To: Thinkin' Gal
That's one hefty heifer.

Am I confused here. I read the report that the Canadian? holstien was 61/2 years old. That the cow was a heifer. Heifer= cow that has not yet had a calf. 6 1/2 years ago I beleive there was no ban on feeding cattle ground up animal waste. Mostly produced and imported to Canada from the US.If this was a holstien milk cow 6 1/2 years old and has been slaughtered and sold as beef there really is something wrong. Help me out here. Regards

131 posted on 12/28/2003 3:28:44 PM PST by biffalobull
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Comment #132 Removed by Moderator

To: Gelato
So, Canadians last May used a cow with mad cow disease for American dog food.

I beleive this is misstated. The cow found last May in Alberta was destroyed and burned, along with 1000's of head of cattle that were tested and found to be not infected.The American border is still closed to live Alberta beef and it has ruined the cattle industry here.

I heard today the Canadian Govt. was not going to panic and close the border until there was something more substantial to go on.

Regards

133 posted on 12/28/2003 3:38:15 PM PST by biffalobull
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Comment #134 Removed by Moderator

To: cynicom
Chicken looks better everyday

Visit parts of the Delmar pennisula. :-(

135 posted on 12/28/2003 3:51:03 PM PST by fourhorsemen
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To: Yaelle
This cow went Down only after calving and was well enough to breed at considerable expense to the dairy. If she was sick she would never have been allowed to calve...
136 posted on 12/28/2003 3:53:21 PM PST by tubebender (Don't believe anything you hear and only half of what you see...)
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To: Battle Axe
One of her calves was a bull which has been located and I believe she had 2 still births that may have been twin ?
137 posted on 12/28/2003 4:01:35 PM PST by tubebender (Don't believe anything you hear and only half of what you see...)
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To: Yaelle
Is organic or corn-fed beef likely to be safer (although highly expensive)?

Buying from a farm where no meat products go into the food, and where killing does not involve the stun machine, which is known to push brain parts into the muscles, would be safer.

Yes; or, you might stick with grass-fed cattle. You know, grass, that stuff that cows are actually designed to eat? This problem started when "corporate" farms started feeding cows other cows, sheep offal, ground chicken, etc.

138 posted on 12/28/2003 4:35:03 PM PST by pickemuphere
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To: Yaelle
... this cow was a dairy cow and only went to the slaughterhouse and thus into our food supply BECAUSE she was so sick she could no longer stand up.

Dairy cow? That means she's been contributing to the food supply for all of her productive life. (I don't know that you can catch Mad Cow through milk but there are diseases that can be spread by it, like tuberculosis. )

139 posted on 12/28/2003 4:40:00 PM PST by Looking for Diogenes
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To: nmh
Look, there are 60 million people in England, and 20 have died from a disease that nobody has proven has any link to Mad-Cow over the last 20 years. To suggest that this is a big crisis is ridiculous. I ate a steak today, and I'll eat one tomorrow.
140 posted on 12/28/2003 5:20:00 PM PST by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
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