Daily News Update, Dec. 18, 2007

BSE case
confirmed in Canada
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA)
has confirmed the diagnosis of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in
a 13-year-old beef cow from Alberta. The animal's carcass is under
CFIA control, and no part of it entered the human
food or animal feed systems.
Canada has a suite of robust BSE
control measures exceeding the recommended international standards. This
year, the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) categorized Canada
as a Controlled Risk country for BSE. This status
acknowledges the effectiveness of Canada's surveillance, risk mitigation
and eradication measures. This case will not affect Canada's risk
status.
Canada has taken all necessary measures to
achieve the eventual elimination of BSE from the
national cattle herd. The enhanced feed ban, which came into effect on
July 12, 2007, is designed to prevent more than 99 percent of potential
BSE infectivity from entering the Canadian feed
system.
The feed ban prohibits cattle-derived
materials with potential to harbor BSE infectivity,
such as the brain and spinal cord, from being used in all animal feeds,
pet foods and fertilizers.
The CFIA expects to
detect a small number of cases over the next 10 years as Canada
progresses towards its goal of eliminating the disease from the national
cattle herd. This detection confirms the ongoing high level of
commitment and stewardship on the part of Canadian cattle producers to
food safety and animal health.
The Alberta animal was identified at the
farm level by the national surveillance program, which has detected all
BSE cases found in Canada. The program targets cattle
most at risk and has tested about 190,000 animals since 2003. The
surveillance results reflect an extremely low incidence of BSE
in Canada.
The age of the infected animal falls
within the age range of previous cases detected in Canada under the
national BSE surveillance program. The animal was
born before the implementation of Canada's feed ban in 1997.
An epidemiological investigation directed
by international guidelines is underway to identify the animal's
herdmates at the time of birth and the pathways by which it might have
become infected.
All findings will be publicly released
once the investigation concludes.
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