BSE risk and the use of meat and bone meal in the feed industry: perspectives in the context of relaxing control measures
2013
Ducrot , Christian (INRA , Saint-Genes-Champanelle (France). UR 0346 Épidémiologie Animale) | Paul , Mathilde (INRA , Toulouse (France). UMR 1225 Interactions hôtes-agents pathogènes) | Calavas , Didier (Agence Nationale de Sécurité Sanitaire de l'Alimentation, de l'Environnement et du Travail, Lyon 7(France).)
The paper presents an insight from epidemiology and geography on the BSE risk. The epidemic declined sharply following the ban of meat and bone meal in ruminant feed. BSE cases born after the ban and reinforced measures were due to cross-contamination between feed for monogastrics and feed for ruminants at the feed factory and on farms. Cross-contamination is difficult to control in the feed chain, particularly because contaminated material can infect cattle at very low doses. Designing separate feed processing lines or dedicating factories to ruminants is an efficient strategy, but is not economically feasible in the regions with low animal density. So, changes in control measures should target both the feed industry and farmers, and take into account the difficult economic context that limits the industry's ability to adopt the most effective solutions to prevent cross-contamination
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