EU rejects virus vaccination plan

Published: 20 March 2001 y., Tuesday
European Union agriculture ministers have rejected calls for a vaccination campaign to fight foot-and-mouth disease. They have insisted the current policy of isolating the disease by destroying animals suspected of having the virus and restricting livestock movements is the best way of containing the outbreak. France, which has recorded the only confirmed case in Europe outside the UK, is confident the policy has worked for its farmers. EU officials said that any vaccination campaign would cost all member nations their current "foot-and-mouth-free" status in world trade markets. Experts also pointed out that vaccinations were not 100 percent effective and could hinder tracking of the disease since vaccinated animals carry the same antibodies as those infected. "Vaccination sounds like the right strategy until you examine what it really means," Britain's agriculture minister Nick Brown said. "It isn't the easy option that it might first appear." However, the EU said they would give further study to the possibility of using vaccinations as a last resort in case the disease develops into a wider epidemic. EU veterinary experts are scheduled to meet on Tuesday to review the EU's containment measures which have severely restricted animal movements, banning exports from Britain and France, closing all livestock markets across the 15-nation bloc and allowing transport to slaughterhouse only under tight controls. "I can't rule it out, but it would be a substantial retreat," Brown said. He assured his EU colleagues Britain was doing all it could to stop the outbreak from spreading abroad, but warned it could be months before the disease is eradicated in Britain.
Šaltinis: europe.cnn.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

No SARS case in Chinese mainland

There was no report of any severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) case in the 24 hours more »

Simple blood test could detect breast cancer

A simple blood test could in the future be used to detect breast cancer, a disease which affects 10 percent of women in the Western world more »

Blood test spots 'asbestos cancer'

A simple blood test could detect early signs of deadly 'asbestos cancer', scientists have claimed more »

New Weapon Against HIV

Eastern Europe is actively preparing to fight the greatest plague of our times-the HIV virus and AIDS more »

Storm splits world's biggest iceberg

A powerful Antarctic storm has helped split apart an iceberg the size of Jamaica, a New Zealand scientist said Tuesday more »

The solar storms

Predicting Space Weather Becomes More Precise more »

Smooth flight from space but bumpy ride back on earth

American Astranout Edward Lu, Russia's Yuri Malenchenko and Spain's Pedro Duque, have touched down safely in Kazakhstan. more »

A more effective first-line agent

New Drug Promising for Advanced Breast Cancer more »

Manufacture of vaccines to end in Finland after 100 years

New imported whooping cough vaccine makes Finnish production unfeasible more »

World Bank's Regional Support Strategy

Europe and Central Asia has fastest growing HIV/AIDS epidemic in the world more »