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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

"Unfit for human consumption": tuberculosis and the problem of infected meat in late Victorian Britain.

Journal:
Bulletin of the history of medicine
Year:
2003
Authors:
Waddington, Keir

Plain-English summary

In the 1890s, there were growing concerns in Britain about meat infected with tuberculosis, which is a serious disease that can affect both animals and humans. Veterinarians played a key role in raising awareness about the risks of eating such meat, especially after a scientist named Robert Koch discovered the bacteria responsible for the disease in 1882. While there was a general agreement about the dangers, there was still confusion about how the infection spread and whether cooking the meat could make it safe to eat. As a result, while some efforts were made to address the issue, the problem of selling infected meat and the safety of milk remained complicated and unresolved.

Abstract

By the 1890s, questions about tuberculous meat in Britain served to transform the issue of infected meat from an ill-defined to a concrete threat. Veterinarians, building on European inoculation (or transmission) experiments, played a prominent part in constructing the debate, with medical officers of health following. With the emergence of bacteriology in the 1880s, a consensus emerged about the dangers of tuberculous meat: Robert Koch's identification of the tubercle bacillus in 1882, and the connection he saw between bovine tuberculosis and the disease in man, provided confirmation of the disease's danger to man. It was from this point that veterinary and public health interests diverged. Whereas a general agreement had been reached, the extent of the problem remained open to doubt. Confusion revolved around two issues: the localization of infection, and the question of cooking. The latter was thought to make tuberculous meat "safe," as attention shifted to the problem of milk; whereas the former frustrated efforts to combat the sale of meat showing signs of infection.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14523263/