|

International Meat Crisis
DANGER: SURGERY AND MEDICAL EXAMINATIONS
The ramifications of mad cow disease are remarkable.
We wish at least some of it was good news. Within a few years (if not
now), it may be unsafe to undergo surgery (medical and dental) and even
routine endoscopic medical examinations.
The problem is prion-contamination of medical
instruments which cannot be sterilized; yet medical experts declare the
cost of discarding them after each use in prohibitive.
According to the November 13, 2000, issue of The
Times of London, England, "Half the surgical instruments
used for tonsil operations could be contaminated by variant CJD,
according to an expert." The problem is that autoclaving
equipment, used in hospitals and dental clinics everywhere to sterilize
instruments, does not kill prions—the cause of animal and human
variants of mad cow disease. This means that, if a patient that the
instruments were used on had CJD, prions can be transferred to
subsequent patients.
The estimate for the surgical instruments was based
on a conservative estimate of 10,000 people in Britain which are
incubating the disease. John Collinge of Imperial College School of
Medicine in London said that the ear, nose, and throat surgeons at St.
Mary’s Hospital, part of the medical school, "calculated that half
the tonsillectomy [instrument] sets in the UK are contaminated. This
is, potentially, a serious problem. It’s a major problem to which the
Department of Health has given a lot of thought and not much
action." The British Department of Health is consulting with
surgeons on whether to spend the extra money to switch to disposable,
single-use instruments—especially in tonsil, appendix, eye, and brain
surgeries (Times of London, November 13, 2000).
The following excerpt was written January 14, 1999 by
John von Radowitz, medical correspondent. Parallel reports were printed
in the British Press Association, in the Guardian, for January
15, 1999, and by Steve Connor, Science editor of the Independent,
January 14, 1999. See the January 1999 issue of the British medical
journal, The Lancet, for detailed research data. Here are these
findings:
"Scientists are to test thousands of people
for CJD, the human form of mad cow disease, after discovering evidence
in people’s tonsils, it emerged today. Previously, the disease
could only be confirmed after victims had died. The find means it may be
possible in the next three years to establish if a CJD time bomb is
ticking within Britain’s population. But it also raises renewed
concerns about the risk of infection from surgical equipment in
hospitals, the expert behind the discovery said.
"Scientists plan to screen thousands of people
using a new test. A significant positive result would provide early
warning of a major epidemic to come and allow time for action aimed at
averting the disaster. Professor John Collinge, from St. Mary’s
Hospital, London, said today: ‘If we were to screen several
thousand tonsils and found that several were postive that would be a
real cause for concern.’
"The concern about infection raised by the new
findings centers on rogue prion proteins that spread the disease and
cannot be cleaned from surgical instruments no matter how thoroughly
they are sterilized. In the future, therefore, it may be necessary
to introduce disposable instruments for certain procedures. A special
committee of experts advising the [British] Government is already
looking at this issue.
"Animal studies have shown that spongiform
encephalopathy diseases, which include different forms of CJD, BSE in
cattle and the sheep infection scrapie, reside in the lymph system
before attacking the brain. Tonsils are linked to the lymph system. The
new research by Professor Collinge’s team showed this also appeared to
be the way new variant CJD behaved in humans. But only the new
variant form of CJD, which is effectively mad cow disease transferred to
humans through infected beef, was detected in tonsils. The ‘classical’
form of CJD, which appears for no known reason in one person in a
million, was not seen in the tissue samples.
"Scientists now know they can diagnose new
variant CJD by analyzing a surgically removed piece of tonsil tissue.
Until now, scientists have had to wait until the death of a patient to
find out definitively if there is CJD infection. [But, in snipping a
piece of tonsil to test for the disease, they might give it to the
person!]
"No one knows at present what the fallout might
be from people eating BSE-infected beef that was routinely used in
burgers and other meat products before a [British] ban on suspect offals
was introduced in 1989. New variant CJD has a long incubation period
which may run into decades, in which case the trickle of cases seen
so far may be just the start of a flood.
"Professor Collinge admitted he was concerned
about the possibility of new variant CJD being transmitted via infected
surgical instruments. This had always been a theoretical risk. But
the conclusive evidence of tonsil infection [by prions] meant it was now
a real possibility. But throwing away expensive surgical instruments
had to be ruled out because of the cost, said Professor Collinge. He
added, ‘There is no means of sterilizing surgical instruments
adequately for prions."
It should be mentioned here that, in order to cut
costs, more and more U.S. hospitals are reusing
"disposable" medical catheters and equipment which is
infecting people with an increasing number of diseases. This infection
is occurring, not only during operations but even routine physical exams
(oral, rectal, vaginal, etc.)! For more on this, see such sources as
"Risky Recycling," U.S. News & World Report, September
20, 1999. This is a major developing health crisis, brought about by
tightening medical costs, and involves both prions and other diseases.
ENDANGERED BLOOD SUPPLY
Douglas P. Starr, in his 1998 book, Blood: An Epic
History of Medicine and Commerce (Knopf is the publisher), discloses
that, first the AIDS crisis and now the prion crisis is destroying
the American Red Cross (ARC) blood supplies, both in reputation, number
of blood donations, and financial base.
Having failed to live up to its 1988 agreement with
the FDA, in 1998, the ARC was required, under court order, to make
extremely expensive changes (which increased its costs by $25-$35
per unit of blood). The changeover, required by the AIDS crisis, cost
the ARC $287 million.
But then, a new crisis occurred: In 1994, the news
broke that a Utah man, Doug McEwen, was slowly dying of CJD—mad cow
disease. The worst part was that McEwen had previously donated over a
hundred blood transfusions to the ARC blood supply, part of which had
been sent to Canada for distribution. The blood had been
intermingled in with many large pools of blood.
After months of deliberation, the ARC ordered the
destruction of several million dollars worth of blood. Ultimately, that
one case cost the ARC $130 million.
But who knows how many other AIDS or prion-infected
people have been donating blood or, in the future, will begin to do so?
It is a well-known fact that homosexuals make extra money by selling
blood, and there is no practical way to test prospective blood donors
for prions.
The British medical journal, Lancet, for
January 9, 1999 reported that, in December 1998, the Canadian
Government officially decided that all the blood, contaminated by
McEwen, the Utah man who died of CJD, could be released into the public
blood supply! Declaring that there is "no scientific
evidence" that CJD could be transmitted through blood, the Canadian
Government lifted a 4-year quarantine of blood products made from plasma
donated by McEwen "and others with CJD."
In late December, 1998, Health Canada’s Bureau of
Biologics, under the direction of Keith Bailey, freed Canada’s blood
agencies to use albumin, immunoglobulins, and factor VIII made from
plasma from people with CJD, including McEwen. He had donated blood over
100 times, including some after he had begun to show signs of CJD. Canadian
blood banks had saved millions of dollars, and hospitals throughout the
nation would not experience any blood shortages.
U.S. health authorities only require the withdrawal
of plasma from donors with variant CJD. All the rest of the blood they
give is used! For more on this, see the Lancet article.

CDC ON CJD DEATH RATES
The chart on the next page was prepared by the
Centers on Disease Control (CDC), based in Atlanta.
The bar graph shows that a majority of people
who contract CJD (mad cow disease) incubate
the disease for a number of years and do not die until they have passed
their late 40s.
The line graph indicates death rate per 1
million people, which peaks at the age of 73.
FOOD SUPPLEMENTS
WHICH CONTAIN MEAT
Vitamins, minerals, and herbal supplements are an
invaluable aid to health and healing. But you need to read the label
carefully. The following news release, dated September 27, 2000,
discusses so-called "herbal" supplements which contain animal
products.
The following article was released by the Organic
Consumers Association, through the Associated Press, February 5, 2001.
"New York: Despite their plant-based
image, some herbal supplements contain ‘raw animal parts’—including,
according to a report, cow brain matter.
"There is no evidence that any herbal product
has been contaminated with the agent that causes bovine spongiform
encephalopathy (BSE), the mad cow disease that triggers a similar
brain-wasting disease in humans who eat tainted beef.
"However, Dr. Scott A. Norton said in an
interview, ‘I would advise all of my patients not to take
supplements that contain central nervous system tissue from animals.’ [Norton
did not realize that CJD can be contracted by eating other parts of
BSE-infected animals.] The problem is that herbal-supplement labeling
is not always clear, Norton writes in a letter in the July 27th
issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. Although Norton
found one product that listed, as part of its ingredients, 17 cow
organs, from lungs to brain matter, other manufacturers are not so
forthright. For example, most consumers would likely not realize
that ‘hypothalamus’ refers to brain tissue, said Norton, a
dermatologist and botanist from Chevy Chase. He mentioned one product
which contained bull testicles (on the label called "orchis").
" ‘The public,’ Norton said, ‘doesn’t
fully understand what they’re getting into when they buy these
products.’ The public should at least be aware of what is there,
according to Norton. ‘I think a lot of us would feel we’ve been
duped,’ he said, ‘if we think we’re getting a wholesome product
and then find out it contains animal parts.’ "—Organic
Consumers Association, through the Associated Press, February 5, 2001.
Special note: We do well to be very cautious
regarding the herbal products we use, to make sure no animal products
are included in them. Not mentioned in the above article is the danger
of taking calcium supplements which may have bonemeal in them.
Here is a second article, with the same date, about
Norton’s findings. There are those who take food supplements which are
not vitamins, minerals, or herbs, but "glandulars" which
consist of various animal organs.
"Washington (AP): Dr. Scott Norton was browsing
through herbal supplements when he spotted bottles containing not
just plants but some unexpected animal parts: brains, testicles,
tracheas and glands from cows and other animals.
"The Maryland physician sounded an alarm:
How
can Americans be sure those supplements, some imported from Europe, are
made of tissue free from mad cow disease?
"Norton’s complaint has government scientists
scrambling to investigate a possible hole in the nation’s safety net
against mad cow disease and its cousin that destroys human brains . .
Just what bulk ingredients containing cow brain or nerve tissue might be
slipping from Europe through U.S. ports? . . The FDA inspects less
than 1 percent of all imports under its jurisdiction . . FDA
officials contend the issue isn’t a huge concern. They note the
majority of supplements are made from plants, not animals . .
"The [supplement] industry’s Council for
Responsible Nutrition also calls the worry exaggerated, saying
gland-containing supplements account for less than 1 percent of sales.
Officials are trying to determine how much is imported and plan to meet
soon with FDA."—Organic Consumers Association, Associated
Press, February 5, 2001.

|