
Taken from Dr Vernon Coleman's Health Letter
Volume 5 No 9 (April 2001)
The general panic among farmers has been inspired not by concern for animals or for the health of the general public (although, contrary to popular myth, human beings can contract foot and mouth disease) but purely for economic reasons. Beef cattle which get foot and mouth disease dont develop at the expected rate and dairy cattle stop producing milk while they are ill. Most animals get better, but farmers cant be bothered to nurse them when they are ill and not profitable. And so the government has to bail the farmers out by killing the sick animals and handing over lorry loads of taxpayers cash.
As I write there
seems to be a real chance that the government will soon start killing hundreds
of thousands of sheep, claiming that it is necessary to prevent the spread of
this relatively mild disease.
I have a suspicion
that it wont be long before we hear that the government is planning to
kill all the sheep in the country.
Is that really
necessary?
Of course it isnt.
But it occurs to
me that there could be another reason for this extraordinary piece of barbarism.
As I revealed several
years ago Mad Cow disease has gone back into sheep (you will remember that it
originally affected cattle when they were fed bits taken from dead sheep who
had been suffering from scrapie). I have seen a sheep with the disease and spoken
to vets who have confirmed the diagnosis. For several years the government has
been denying this and, in an attempt to hide the truth, has been confiscating,
killing and burying or burning every sheep which has new style Mad Cow disease.
The farmers and the politicians (and the meat industry) are terrified that if
it becomes widely known that sheep now have a new variant of Mad Cow disease
Britains meat trade will collapse completely.
Killing all the
sheep in Britain would remove the problem and the evidence. And the foot and
mouth epidemic will provide just the excuse the politicians have been looking
for.
Foot and mouth
disease is extremely infectious (it is commonly described as contagious but
contagious diseases are only spread by contact and since foot and mouth disease
is also spread through the air it clearly is not simply contagious) and a major
economic threat to farmers and it isnt going to go away quickly.
(Actually, it is rather inaccurate to describe it as a threat to farmers. The
government will bail them out. The racecourse industry has also suffered during
this crisis. Have they been offered recompense? No chance. When the weather
is bad do hoteliers get a handout? Not a hope in hell.)
The ignorance and
stupidity of the farming community was nicely illustrated by television news
shots of farmers forcing visitors to their farms to wash their Wellington boots
in disinfectant. Im surprised that the farmers didnt cover themselves
in blood, sacrifice their first-born and dance around a big bonfire. The disease
can be transmitted through the air (it has, in the past, spread across the Channel
from France to England and, this time, seems likely to have spread in the opposite
direction) so you dont need much of an IQ to realise that bowls full of
disinfectant arent really likely to make a great deal of difference to
the spread of the disease. (And does disinfectant kill the virus anyway? There
even seems to be some doubt about this.)
One of the most
mysterious things about the whole affair has been the fact that although there
is an allegedly safe, well-established and effective vaccine available I have
it on reliable authority that the British government has banned farmers and
vets from using it. I dont have much faith in vaccines, but this does
seem to me to be a rather odd policy for a government which is desperately keen
to persuade parents to have their children vaccinated against just about every
possible disease. I asked Nick Brown, the responsible government minister, to
explain this. Sadly, the government seems to be still hunting for an answer.
One explanation which has been put forward is that the vaccine isnt always
effective. That seems an odd excuse. On that basis we can presumably soon expect
to see Ministers replacing childhood vaccination programmes with a cull of children
suffering from measles and whooping cough.
Another odd thing
about the foot and mouth epidemic is the way that the government and the media
seemed to be ignoring the risk to human health. Contrary to popular opinion
human beings can catch foot and mouth disease which can, I believe, be spread
in meat and in dairy produce. (The French border authorities are currently confiscating
cheese sandwiches from Britons travelling to France.) And I believe that foot
and mouth disease is now in the food chain. If you eat bits taken from an animal
with foot and mouth disease you may get the disease. There has never been a
better time to give up eating meat. (The foot and mouth epidemic could be a
huge boon to Britains health. The shortage of meat will save thousands
of lives if it persists.)
Incidentally, the
pigs who are believed to have started the whole thing are said to have caught
foot and mouth through eating discarded school meals including bits of
imported meat. It is, so the experts say, probably through the imported meat
that the disease got into the British farming system. (Havent British
farmers learnt anything from the Mad Cow horror? I am astonished that farmers
are still feeding meat to herbivores.)
No one seems to
have asked about the children who ate the school dinners which contained the
contaminated meat which gave the foot and mouth disease to the pigs. Is there
a risk that some of those children may also develop foot and mouth disease?
Have their parents been warned? Or is that simply too horrendous a thought for
a government shortly intending to seek re-election to contemplate?
Talking of elections, the one bright spot in this whole sorry affair is the
fact that the governments clever plot to make sure that the anti-hunting
bill doesnt become law may well fail as a result of the foot and mouth
crisis. Its no secret that the government was planning to call an election
on May 3rd. This may not now be possible because of the movement restrictions
introduced to appease farmers. And the result of the delay could be that blood
thirsty, pro-hunting members of the House of Lords will not, after all, be able
to block the bill. Now, wouldnt that be something to smile about?
Vernon Coleman
Copyright 2001