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Wednesday, 25 November 2009

MRSA - Weasel words on British pigs




'Evidence does not suggest that the presence of MRSA in pig herds is a public health risk.'

They must hold the people of Britain in total contempt. MRSA has been hidden up by Britain's corrupt government veterinarians for at least five years.

It will not be long before they are stripped of Crown immunity and before the Courts.



Pig MRSA widespread in Europe

The Ecologist

25th November, 2009

Calls for national testing in UK pig herd after survey finds superbug to be prevalent throughout Europe

MRSA has been found in pig herds in more than two-thirds of countries within the European Union (EU), new research shows.

In the first EU-wide survey, the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) found the antibiotic-resistant bug in 17 out of 24 member states.

Spain and Germany had the highest incidence, with over 40 per cent of pig holdings testing positive for MRSA.

The most common MRSA strain found is considered by EFSA to be 'an occupational health risk for farmers, veterinarians and their families'. It causes skin infections, pneumonia and bone infections.

National test

Whilst the survey did not find any evidence of MRSA in UK pig holdings, the Soil Association has warned that MRSA could still be present in British pigs and that the test used was inadequate.

Another country declared MRSA-free by the survey, Switzerland, did detect the bacteria through its own national testing.

The Soil Association is calling for the UK to carry out its own national survey of bacterial infections in pigs.

'MRSA testing is simple and relatively inexpensive and there can be no excuse for not introducing a comprehensive UK testing program in pigs, poultry, cattle and horses, based on the tried and tested use of nasal swabs,' said Soil Association Policy Adviser Richard Young.

A spokesperson for Defra said:

'Evidence does not suggest that the presence of MRSA in pig herds is a public health risk.'



--
Regards
Pat Gardiner
Release and independently audit the results of testing British pigs
for MRSA and C.Diff now!
http://www.go-self-sufficient.com/ and http://animal-epidemics.blogspot.com/

Saturday, 7 November 2009

Circovirus reaches British, Dutch and German cattle

.
It seems that a further disaster has been visited upon us.

The circovirus epidemics ravaging pig herds for the past decade seem to have spread to cattle.

Circovirus - thoroughly underestimated and covered up by Britain's
corrupt government veterinarians.


http://www.vetsweb.com/news/germany-cause-of-blood-sweating-in-calves-still-obscure-610.html

Germany: cause of blood sweating in calves still obscure
//05 Nov 2009

German researchers investigated 52 calves from 42 farms in Germany, which suffered from a haemorrhagic disease with unknown cause. Similar cases appeared recently in the Netherlands, Scotland, England, and Wales where is spoken of fatal bleeding calf syndrome ...


...Using a broad-spectrum PCR, a circovirus with high similarities to porcine circovirus type 2b (PCV2b), was detected in several of the affected calves.

Conclusion

The distinct cause of the disease still remains unknown. Potentially, the pathogenesis is complex and includes components such as infection, hereditary disposition, and immune- mediated destruction of blood cell precursors.

Further investigations are necessary to clarify the role of PCV2.

Source
Proceedings of the 27th meeting of the European Society of Veterinary Pathology, Krakow, Poland, 9-12 Sep 2009 (pdf)

Abstract title: Fatal aplastic anaemia with haemorrhagic disease in calves in Germany. EC Kappe et. al.