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Disease surveillance, eradication, and control programs have achieved significant success over the years in reducing animal disease in the U.S.
Yet animal disease remains a reality in the U.S. as illustrated in the following examples.
Click on each example to read how the inability to effectively trace diseased animals can have widespread consequences.
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BSE is not common in the U.S. and feeding regulations in this country makes it unlikely an outbreak will be widespread. This case study, however, illustrates how a high profile disease can have a serious impact on the confidence of consumers and trading partners.
Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) is a chronic, degenerative disease affecting the central nervous system of cattle. Also known as "mad cow disease," BSE was discovered in Britain in 1986 and has remained a worldwide concern to the present day. BSE spreads among cattle primarily through feed containing meat and bone meal made from rendered ruminant products of infected animals.
Incident:
- The first diagnosis of BSE in the U.S. occurred on December 23, 2003
- A second BSE case was discovered on June 24, 2005 from the sample of a 12-year old Texas cow
- A third BSE case was discovered on March, 15 2006 from the sample of a 10-year old Alabama cow
Investigative Summary:
- A large number of cows associated with the index herd were untraceable in each investigation
- Each BSE case required the investigation of at least eight different herds
- The three investigations took a total of 155 days to complete
Impact:
- U.S. beef exports dropped from a record 2.5 billion pounds in 2003 to 461 million pounds in 2004, a fall of over 80 percent. The outbreak cost the beef industry over $2 billion in 2004 alone.
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