![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I thought my ex had moved!
|
#12
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "George Z. Bush" wrote in message ... I don't understand why the press is making such a big to-do about the thing. From what I have heard, there have only been some 139 cases in human beings in the entire world. That's 139 out of some 3 billions......you have a far better chance of being struck by lightning or winning four lotteries within the same year than you have of contracting that thing. It is a new, incurable, infectious, deadly disease with freighting symptoms. With proper attention the disease itself can likely be sent the way of smallpox at minimal cost but if ignored it could be epidemic. The human population is so dense and interconnected with frequent, easy and quick travel that a really biologically hot new disease could kill multiple billions of people. Luck has been with us so far, if we keep on top of it we may be able to substitute wisdom and knowledge in when our luck runs thin. Quite frankly, I think the media has this one just about right. Maybe a tad overblown but not by much. |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
George Z. Bush wrote:
: I don't understand why the press is making such a big to-do about the thing. : From what I have heard, there have only been some 139 cases in human beings in : the entire world. That's 139 out of some 3 billions...... True. On the other hand, Creuzfeldt-Jacob disease is appalling in its nature and symptoms; a horrible death and very hard on the family. What makes it worse is that this is a totally preventable event. BSE is almost a man-made disease; if people had not been so stupid to feed cows with insufficiently treated proteins from other animals (IIRC this decision was taken in the 1980s, when the UK and perhaps some other countries lowered the legal standard for heat treatment of carcases) there would have been no BSE. And if authorities had not taken an incredibly complacent "no harm will ever come to you" attitude about BSE it would have been easy to eradicate, as AFAIK there is no cow-to-cow transmission. So every death to CJD is one to many. It is not like lightning striking someone. : Maybe it was just a slow news day and they needed something to : fill the on-air minutes. No, it is important enough. Even in economic terms: In the EU the impact on the beef industry of the BSE cases was dramatic and it will probably be the same in the USA. It remains to be seen how wide-spread this is --- AFAIK controls in the US meat industry are only sporadic, so an isolated case does not need to remain one. -- Emmanuel Gustin |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "John Keeney" wrote in message ... It is a new, incurable, infectious, deadly disease with freighting symptoms. With proper attention the disease itself can likely be sent the way of smallpox at minimal cost but if ignored it could be epidemic. It's not infectious, at least not unless you choose to feed on dead sufferers... I don't think it's infectious amongst animals in the same herd, but the worry is if the triggers are present in the food then they could all develop it. (Unless I recall incorrectly.) The massive slaughter we saw in the UK two years ago was not to halt the spread of mad-cow, but foot and mouth, which is infectious. The main problem with vCJD is that the incubation time is up to ten years. until which time it's undetectable, and as you say is a vicious, incurable wasting disease. The outreak in the UK is (widely assumed) to be down to the practice of feeding bovine livestock with animal feed made from ground-up cows. The disease develops from the injestion of spinal and brain tissue of the same-species. CJD has also been reported in the past in remote canibalistic tribes. Another possible infection method is the use of growth hormone used on unusually small human children to promote growth. The hormone is developed from cow brain tissue. I would choose to worry about mad cow if cases start appearing throughout the country, as that indicates that the whole national farming procedures are flawed, and that infected feed is returning to the animals' food chain. In which case, you may well start seeing cases of vCJD in humans within the next decade. Si |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Emmanuel.Gustin" wrote in message ... What makes it worse is that this is a totally preventable event. BSE is almost a man-made disease; if people had not been so stupid to feed cows with insufficiently treated proteins from other animals (IIRC this decision was taken in the 1980s, when the UK and perhaps some other countries lowered the legal standard for heat treatment of carcases) If I recall corrcetly, BSE is imune to heat treatmet. The only solution, which is common sense if you think about it, is that you shouldn't force your herbivorous cattle to consume their own species as part of their feed. Si |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
"Emmanuel.Gustin" wrote: George Z. Bush wrote: : I don't understand why the press is making such a big to-do about the : thing. : From what I have heard, there have only been some 139 cases in human beings : in : the entire world. That's 139 out of some 3 billions...... True. On the other hand, Creuzfeldt-Jacob disease is appalling in its nature and symptoms; a horrible death and very hard on the family. What makes it worse is that this is a totally preventable event. BSE is almost a man-made disease; if people had not been so stupid to feed cows with insufficiently treated proteins from other animals (IIRC this decision was taken in the 1980s, when the UK and perhaps some other countries lowered the legal standard for heat treatment of carcases) there would have been no BSE. Yemeni sheep are fed protein from other animals? cf a recent case of C-J diagnosed in a Special Forces sergeant during the past year; the cause of infection determined most likely to be eating sheeps brains with some tribal elders during some local negotiations. |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
"Emmanuel Gustin" wrote: "Steve Hix" wrote in message ... cf a recent case of C-J diagnosed in a Special Forces sergeant during the past year; the cause of infection determined most likely to be eating sheeps brains with some tribal elders during some local negotiations. Curious, as scrapie in sheep is generally considered not able to 'jump species' to humans. Perhaps Yemen has a strain that is able to infect humans... Well, Osama bin Laden is from Yemen -- perhaps he gorged on too many infected sheep? |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
15 Dec 2003 - Today’s Military, Veteran, War and National Security News | Otis Willie | Military Aviation | 0 | December 15th 03 10:01 PM |
13 Dec 2003 - Today’s Military, Veteran, War and National Security News | Otis Willie | Military Aviation | 0 | December 13th 03 08:47 PM |
27 Nov 2003 - Today’s Military, Veteran, War and National Security News | Otis Willie | Military Aviation | 1 | November 30th 03 05:57 PM |
11 Nov 2003 - Today’s Military, Veteran, War and National Security News | Otis Willie | Military Aviation | 0 | November 11th 03 11:58 PM |
08 Nov 2003 - Today’s Military, Veteran, War and National Security News | Otis Willie | Military Aviation | 0 | November 9th 03 01:51 AM |