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FDA Strengthens Safeguards for Consumers of Beef
Issues Regulation on Animal Feeds with Added Safeguards Against BSE
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration today issued a final
regulation barring certain cattle materials from all animal feed,
including pet food. The final rule further protects animals and
consumers against bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE, also known as
"mad cow disease").
“This FDA action serves to further protect the U.S. cattle
population from the already low risk of BSE,” said Dr. Bernadette
Dunham, Director of FDA’s Center for Veterinary Medicine. “The new rule
strengthens existing safeguards.’’
The materials that can no longer be used in animal feed are the
tissues that have the highest risk for carrying the agent thought to
cause BSE. These high risk cattle materials are the brains and spinal
cords from cattle 30 months of age and older. The entire carcass of
cattle not inspected and passed for human consumption is also
prohibited, unless the cattle are less than 30 months of age, or the
brains and spinal cords have been removed. The risk of BSE in cattle
less than 30 months of age is considered to be exceedingly low.
The removal of high-risk materials from all animal feed will further
protect against inadvertent transmission of the agent thought to cause
BSE, which could occur through cross-contamination of ruminant feed
(intended for animals with four-chambered stomachs, such as cattle)
with non-ruminant feed or feed ingredients during manufacture and
transport, or through misfeeding of non-ruminant feed to ruminants on
the farm. The added measure of excluding high-risk materials from all
animal feeds prevents any accidental feeding of such ingredients to
cattle.
Today’s regulation finalizes a proposed rule that the FDA issued for
public comment in October 2005. The final rule is effective 12 months
from today to allow the livestock, meat, rendering, and feed industries
time to adapt their practices to comply with the new regulation. Under
the new requirements of the final rule, renderers that process cattle
not inspected and passed for human consumption must make available for
FDA inspection their written protocols for determining the age of
cattle and demonstrating that the brain and spinal cords of cattle have
been effectively removed.
Scientific studies have linked BSE to cases of variant
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (vCJD) in humans, an invariably fatal disease
that most likely results from human consumption of infectious material
from cattle with BSE. A 1997 rule prohibited specific risk materials
from use in the human food supply. There have been no vCJD cases linked
to consumption of U.S. beef and the risk of BSE among U.S. cattle is
low.
FDA regulates feed and drugs. The U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA) and FDA together promulgate and enforce the regulations that
ensure the exclusion of specific risk materials from the human food
supply.
For a copy of the final rule and other information about the FDA's work on BSE, go to www.fda.gov/oc/opacom/hottopics/bse.html.
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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 23, 2008
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Media
Inquiries:
Siobhan DeLancey, 301-827-6242
Consumer Inquiries:
888-INFO-FDA
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