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Vaccines Dont Stop Spread of Farm Virus
see story www.news.independent.co.uk March 29, 2001
by Steve Connor & Ben
Russell or go to todays www.drudgereport.com
An emergency vaccination campaign against foot-and-mouth
disease would make no difference to the spread of the disease and may even make
matters worse, according to a suppressed government report.
The previously unpublished report, carried out five years
after the 1967 foot-and-mouth crisis, found that vaccines would have failed to
halt the spread of the virus in four-out-of-five outbreaks and may even have
made the situation worse. In the fifth case, the evidence was equivocal about
the effectiveness of using emergency ring vaccination to stem the spread around
an infected area similar to the scheme proposed on Tuesday by the Government
and authorised yesterday by the European Commission.
Professor Martin Hugh-Jones, who carried out the study as
a researcher at the Ministry of Agricultures Central Veterinary Laboratory at
Weybridge in Surrey, said: Essentially we picked five outbreaks at random and
we found in four cases it made no difference to the number of cases and would
have just added to the problems.
Details of the report, which was suppressed under the
Official Secrets Act, emerged as European veterinary experts authorised Britain
to carry out emergency vaccination of 180,000 cattle in Cumbria and Devon in an
attempt to halt the spread of the disease.
Other scientists are also unsure about the usefulness of a
vaccination campaign, arguing that vaccinated animals can still incubate the
virus, and that all inoculated livestock would in any case have to be culled
eventually to keep Britains disease free status.
Embarrassment for the Government intensified yesterday as
Mr Blair revealed the vast scale of sheep movements that helped to spread the
disease. He told MPs that 1.35 million sheep were moved or exported last month
and admitted that previous estimates of the trade had been an understatement.
He said: If this disease was incubating then, clearly it
has been far more widespread than hitherto thought.
The revelation raised fresh questions over the performance
and long-term future of the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food. Nick
Brown, the Agriculture Minister, has admitted that the department had little
idea of the scale of the national trade in sheep before the outbreak took hold.
Mr Blairs official spokesman admitted the problem was beyond
the expectations that existed at the outset. But he said the Prime Minister believed
the right decisions were made based on the advice given at any one time.
The total number of cases rose by 37 yesterday to 728.
William Hague intensified his attack on the Governments
handling of the situation yesterday, raising the case of a qualified vet who
offered his services but received no response, despite the Ministrys
international appeal for veterinary expertise.
Mr Blair launched a major hearts and minds campaign
yesterday to persuade tourists that Britain was not closed for business. But
his hopes were dashed last night as it emerged that the German Ministry for
Cultural Affairs had advised schools to stop all trips to England within the
near future.
The Government is asking embassies and senior business
figures to bang the drum for Britain at every opportunity amid fears that
investment is under threat.
Professor Hugh-Jones, now professor of epidemiology at
Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, said that his findings were an
embarrassment to the then Conservative government because it had already
decided to establish a vaccine bank, which todays Government is now preparing
to use.
The minister of the day decided that he would lay up a
store of vaccine. We proved you didnt need to. Like all official secrets, they
are not to defend the country, they are to defend the minister, Professor
Hugh-Jones told The Independent.
The report was prepared in response to the official
inquiry into the major outbreak of foot-and-mouth in 1967-68, which led to the
recommendation that the Government should establish a bank of emergency
vaccines against the disease.
Professor Hugh-Jones emigrated to the United States in
1978 and is now a co-ordinator on animal diseases at the World Health
Organisation. He took part in the inquiry into the outbreak of anthrax at
Yekaterinburg in the former Soviet Union, which was later shown to be the
result of an accident at a secret biological weapons factory.
Although he emphasised that the outbreaks in his study
were smaller than the present outbreak, he would still not recommend
vaccination.
No. I wouldnt in the normal course of events. If you go
about the job properly, you can stop these things in their tracks. There should
not have been any delays on slaughter, he said.
Professor Chris Bostock, director of the Institute for
Animal Health, which runs the Pirbright Laboratory in Surrey where the
emergency foot-and-mouth vaccines are stored, said: Generally speaking the
problem with vaccines is that they dont protect completely against infection.
They protect against clinical signs so you wont know that an animal has been
infected. It can be replicating the virus and acting as a source of infection
for animals that havent been infected, Professor Bostock said.
The cost-benefit analysis [of vaccination] would have to
take into account the fact that you would be diverting people away from
culling, he added. There is an awful
lot of misinformation being put out about vaccination being the answer.
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KNOWLEDGE OR OPINIONS OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED
AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO
VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU
ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.