"Texas has had
one variant CJD case," the Texas Department of State Health Services
Infectious Disease Control Unit assures the public on its web site after a
November mad cow scare. " Investigators have concluded that the patient
was a former resident of the UK where exposure was likely to have
occurred."
But that's not what
the press says.
When Irene Gore of
Palestine, TX died in 2001 the Associated Press' headline was, "
Disease Like Mad Cow Kills Woman."
Her own husband
blamed the calf
valve that was surgically placed in her heart in 1979.
"She had been carrying around bovine
material for 20 years," said Mack Gore.
Parents of Karnack, TX Green Beret Sgt. James Alford also believed he had
"the 'variant' form of CJD caused by eating brains or nervous system
tissue from an infected cow," said the AP when he was diagnosed with CJD
in 2003 while in the service. "They worry he may have got it from eating
sheep brains locals served to soldiers as an honor in Oman," said the AP.
Texas, like other states and the federal government dreads an outbreak of
variant CJD, the human brain disease caused by eating cows with mad cow
disease.
Not only can variant CJD spark panic in hospitals, health care settings
and mortuaries, it can wipe out the US beef industry in days. Remember what
happened to US beef exports when the US's first mad cow was discovered in
Washington state in 2003?
No wonder state and federal health agencies continue to protect the
identity of the Texas farm where the first domestically produced mad cow was
raised in 2005.
Why should a meat operation suffer just because it risked the lives of
people who ate its product?
Why shouldn't it be able to continue selling its wholesome products?
Nor did Texas officials release names when a herd of 1,000 head of cattle
"in Texas" were quarantined and 46 carcasses tested for mad cow in
2001 after eating banned animal meal that contained meat and bone. Who ate
those wholesome products?
"This is not a public health issue, it is a violation of an FDA
rule, and the rule is a precautionary rule," said Dr. Konrad Eugster,
executive director of the Texas Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory at the
time--using the same wording officials used earlier this year when meat at risk
for mad cow disease from the Hallmark Meat Company was found in federal school
lunch programs.
Oops.
Despite the three locations the Texas Department of State Health Services
says have had more than six CJD cases since 2000--sporadic CJD comes in
clusters?--Texas authorities say a November scare about the source of a
hospitalized Amarillo woman's disease is unfounded.
In fact Ted McCollum, beef cattle specialist with the Amarillo office of
Texas AgriLife Extension was so sure it was nothing, he called the woman's case
"sporadic" before tests were even done--perhaps to quiet tumbling
beef futures markets at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
Of course Texas authorities also say
venison is safe to eat despite the deer version of mad cow disease, Chronic
Wasting Disease, which Texas spreads through "hundreds of deer-breeding
facilities [which have] have sprung up in the state to feed the interest in
building bucks with bigger antlers," according to the Houston Chronicle.
Like the beef industry, Texas doesn't want to risk its
"multi-billion dollar hunting industry" as the Texas Parks &
Wildlife Commission refers to it, because of a mere food scare.
Unfortunately, venison was not safe for Wayne Waterhouse and James Botts
of Chetek, WI and Roger Marten of Mondovi, WI who all developed rare brain
diseases and died in the 1990s.
Nor did it seem to be safe for the " 3 unusually young patients with
CJD who regularly consumed deer or elk meat" written up in an article in
the October 2001 issue of the Archives of Neurology.
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