Poland Testing Cattle for Mad Cow Disease

Published: 20 January 2001 y., Saturday
All imported slaughtered cattle, cows showing signs of neurological disorder, and randomly-selected Polish cattle over 30 months old will be tested for the disease, chief veterinarian Andrzej Komorowski told AFP. Poland, which has no confirmed cases of BSE, has banned the import of cattle and beef from 12 European countries following outbreaks of mad cow disease.It purchased 5,000 Prionics kits from Switzerland to step up its monitoring of cattle. Import and transit of animal feed containing ground meat and bone from cows has also been banned as it is suspected of transmitting the disease. Poland has no confirmed cases of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (vCJD), the fatal human illness which doctors believe may be caused by eating beef infected with BSE. The Polish veterinary service has also begun to introduce cow tagging and is establishing cattle registers in two regions. The tagging and registers are required under EU rules on agricultural compensation, and are also useful in tracking cattle if BSE cases are discovered.
Šaltinis: Agence France Presse
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

Swine flu: lessons to learn from "disproportionate" EU response

With the new influenza season underway, MEPs have criticised the EU's "disproportionate" response to the outbreak of the H1N1 ("swine flu") virus in 2009-2010. more »

Health in the EU: Nutrition deemed a growing challenge for health in the EU and beyond

Over half the EU adult population is now overweight or obese according to the “Health at a Glance: Europe 2010” report published by the European Commission and the OECD today. more »

Suspected cholera outbreak in Haiti

Over 130 people die in central Haiti due to a suspected outbreak of cholera. more »

Hearing on lessons of Influenza A (H1N1) pandemic

The Influenza A (H1N1) pandemic returned to the Parliament last week but fortunately not in the literal sense. more »

Food: Commission reviews the progressive adoption of the list of permitted health claims

The Commission announced today its intention to restructure the process of progressive adoption of the list of permitted health claims on food products (also known as “Article 13 claims”). more »

Protecting patients: EU to upgrade medicine safety monitoring

Patients will be better informed on how to use medicines, and enabled to report their adverse effects directly to national authorities, thanks to updates of EU laws agreed with the Council and endorsed by Parliament on Wednesday. more »

Peru battles rabies and the plague

Doctors in Peru are facing outbreaks of two killer diseases, rabies and the plague, being spread by bats and rats. more »

Drug experts warn of 'superbug'

Scientists warn a new drug-resistant superbug could spread worldwide, fuelled in part by medical tourism. more »

New milk health scare in China

Chinese officials say they are investigating reports that tainted milk powder has caused premature sexual development in baby girls. more »

Woman to sell baby for medical bill

A woman in India says she has to sell her 6-month-old baby in order to pay her husband's medical expenses. more »