Slaughtered Animal Parts Banned In Feed
The government banned the use of virtually all slaughtered animal parts in U.S. livestock feed Tuesday because of links to “mad cow disease.”
That disease, bovine spongiform encephalopathy, caused public panic when the British government announced last year that a new version of a fatal human brain illness might have been caused by eating infected beef. At least 10 Britons died of this new type of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
The U.S. government insists it has found no signs of mad cow disease in American cattle.
But animals can get the brain disease by eating the tissue of other infected animals - so the Food and Drug Administration issued the long-expected ban to ensure that U.S. livestock remain disease-free.
If a BSE case ever were discovered here, the ban would prevent the disease from spreading through feed, the FDA declared.
But the ban is “totally inadequate to protect the public health” because it exempts pork, declared Consumers Union’s director of consumer policy, Jean Halloran.
The FDA first proposed in January that no cows, sheep or goats eat feed made from ground cows, sheep, goats, deer, elk or mink - species known to be vulnerable to the diseases that eat holes in the brain.
Putting these “ruminant” products in animal feed not only recycled otherwise unusable parts of slaughtered animals, it added protein.
But the FDA’s final rule extended the ban to using any mammalian protein except pure pork or horse, which are not known to get the brain illnesses naturally.
Consumers Union, however, said a laboratory experiment in Britain found pigs injected with BSE did develop the brain illness.
One lone pig out of 10 got sick after British scientists injected BSE material straight into their brains, something “far beyond what we would expect to happen in the real world,” responded FDA veterinary chief Dr. Stephen Sundlof.
The ban goes into effect in 60 days.