Foot and mouth
disease... By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- A Mississippi State University veterinarian was one
of several Americans who spent time in the United Kingdom
this summer helping contain the outbreak of foot and mouth
disease. Groce
served as a U.S. Department of Agriculture Emergency
Eradication Veterinary Medical Officer. He volunteered for
this position when USDA appealed for veterinarians to
respond to the United Kingdom's request for international
help. "The
United States, the United Kingdom and at least 19 other
countries have signed a cooperative agreement to assist each
other when crises such as this foot and mouth disease
outbreak come up," Groce said. Since
early March, the United States has sent over a team of 12 to
15 veterinarians each week to help. Each team serves at
least four weeks and works for the Ministry of Agriculture,
Fisheries and Food, the British equivalent of the
USDA. In
February, the United Kingdom suffered a serious outbreak of
foot and mouth disease, a highly-contagious viral disease
that causes lesions in the mouth and hooves of infected
hogs, cattle and sheep. Groce said the disease is thought to
have entered the United Kingdom near Newcastle-on-Tyne from
an operation that fed hogs improperly cooked table waste
thought to have come from restaurants, ships and
airlines. From
these infected hogs, the disease spread to sheep. Infected
sheep were sold at two weekly sales in the biggest sheep
market in the country before health officials knew the
disease was present. The disease has no cure, so infected
animals must be slaughtered to prevent its further spread. A
vaccine is available, but its use is
controversial. "Some
say it perpetuates the disease and allows animals to carry
the disease without showing signs of it," Groce said. "The
vaccine also interferes with the blood test that is done to
see if the animal is disease-free." About
half of the island's cases have been in Cumbria, a
mountainous region near Scotland. Much of this land is
divided into irregularly shaped fields and common grazing
areas. Opportunities abound for one farm's contaminated
livestock to infect numerous other farms. "This
creates a nightmarish situation when it comes to controlling
one of the most contagious diseases known to man," Groce
said. The
United Kingdom has 12 million cattle and 41 million sheep in
an area not much larger than Mississippi. To contain the
disease, numerous animals were slaughtered and extensive
surveillance given to those that remained in the
area. "When
they identify an infected premise, they slaughter all the
animals on the farm and any animals exposed to them. Then
they draw a 3 kilometer circle, about 1.8 miles, around the
farm. Every animal on a farm even partly inside that circle
is put on restrictions and monitored every 48 hours for 16
days and again at 23 days after the infected farm is
identified," Groce said. This
monitoring means veterinarians visit each farm and visually
inspect every animal on it every two days. Additionally,
they physically examine at least 10 percent of these animals
each time, searching for any signs of disease. Veterinarians
visiting these farms took careful precautions to avoid
contamination. They wore two layers of paper coveralls plus
hooded wetsuits, rubber boots and two pairs of gloves. Only
their faces could be seen. Veterinarians exposed to diseased
animals were taken off monitoring duty for 72 hours so as
not to contaminate any healthy animals. "I
stayed unexposed. I never did see the disease," Groce
said. As of
mid-June, foot and mouth disease had infected more than
1,700 United Kingdom farms and affected 8,000 neighboring
farms. More than 3.3 million animals have been slaughtered
at tremendous loss. Since this outbreak happened in a scenic
area, the region has lost an estimated $9 billion in tourism
revenue, and has had to pay for the activation of large
military and civilian groups, and animal health
professionals brought in to manage the situation. The
U.S. livestock industry has so far been spared in this
outbreak, but Groce said biosecurity is fragile. "In
today's ever-shrinking, interconnected world, the
introduction of foreign animal diseases into our farm animal
populations is becoming a much greater threat," Groce said.
"Vigilance is necessary at all levels of regulatory
agencies, marketing systems and production
units." Released:
July 2, 2001
Animal
Health
MSU veterinarian
aided UK
eradication efforts
Dr.
Wayne Groce, professor and coordinator of the Office of
Special Programs in MSU's College of Veterinary Medicine,
was in Great Britain from May 2 through June 1working in
that country's foot and mouth disease eradication program.
Two other Mississippi veterinarians also served on similar
teams at different times.
-30-
For more information, contact:
Dr.
Wayne Groce, (662) 325-1103
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:36
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm01/010702.html
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