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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Bovine spongiform encephalopathy in Israel: implications for human health.

Journal:
The Israel Medical Association journal : IMAJ
Year:
2003
Authors:
Nitzan-Kaluski, Dorit & Leventhal, Alex
Affiliation:
Food and Nutrition Services

Plain-English summary

In Israel, there was only one reported case of a cow with bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), a serious brain disease, which was published in 2002 and raised concerns among the public and health professionals. This case involved a 10-year-old dairy cow that likely got the disease from eating infected animal feed many years earlier. Since then, health officials have taken precautionary measures, including monitoring and testing, and have noted that no human cases of a related disease called variant Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease (vCJD) have been found in Israel. The country has adjusted its risk classification for BSE, but there has been no significant negative impact on the beef industry, and after testing over 3,800 cows, no additional cases of BSE were found by the end of 2002. Overall, the situation has been managed without further complications.

Abstract

Only one case of a cow infected with bovine spongiform encephalopathy has been reported in Israel. Its publication, in 2002, caused both public and professional concern. The inevitable health policy question raised was whether or not to recommend against consuming beef and what public health measures should be taken. In this article we describe the prion diseases among animals and humans, their interaction and the precautionary procedures that were carried out by the state Veterinary Services and the Ministry of Health since 1988. The BSE case (a 10 year old dairy cow) is believed to be the result of local consumption of infected mammalian meat and bone meal more than a decade earlier. The risk assessment took into consideration that no cases of vCJD (a new variant of Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease) have ever been diagnosed in Israel, as well as the low risk of contamination of the meat due to the religious method of slaughtering performed in the country. The policy decision was to implement a contingency plan prepared in advance. Israel was reclassified from the level II category of geographic risk where BSE is unlikely but not excluded in the herds, to level III where BSE is likely but not confirmed, or confirmed at a lower level. No undue damage to the meat industry has occurred. By the end of 2002, despite the examination of more than 3,800 brains from slaughtered cows older than 3 years, no other cases of BSE have been detected.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14509159/