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And they want to move Plum Island to the middle of Kansas.......

---

FMD in South Korea

Date:

Sun, 16 Jan 2011 08:11:17 -0600

From:

To:

Goats WSU

Below is the latest posting issued by ProMED that addresses the FMD

outbreak in South Korea.

While this post indicates that the number of new cases may finally be

slowing (due to vaccination), new concerns have developed. Blood in

drinking water (presumably from the buried animals) is now causing

concern.

Also, note that one of the updates provides information on the number

of goats in South Korea. The very valid question is whether the deer

and goats will be vaccinated.

The pertinent excerpt is: "Are goats (there are about 270 000 of them

in South Korea, held in more than 20 000 establishments) and deer

(about 79 000, held in more than 6000 establishments) to be included

in the vaccination scheme?"

And, in case anyone is trying to follow all the information I

forwarded, there was indeed an e-mail title: "FMD in South Korea--Part

9." However, at this time, I have been unable to get get any version

of it to arrive at the WSU List Serv. I apologize if several copies

do show up; however, my guess is that they have been censored (not by

WSU) due to both the author of the opinion piece quoted and the nature

of the comments contained in that piece.-- in NE Texas

Archive Number20110115.0181

Published Date15-JAN-2011

SubjectPRO/AH> Foot & mouth disease - S Korea (04): update, RFI

FOOT AND MOUTH DISEASE - SOUTH KOREA (04): UPDATE, REQUEST FOR INFORMATION

**************************************************************************

A ProMED-mail post

In this update:

[1] Update

[2] Water contamination?

[3] Vaccination plans, regaining FMD-free status

******

[1] Update

Date: Sat 15 Jan 2011

Source: Yonhapnews [edited]

<http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/business/2011/01/15/8/0501000000AEN20110115001600320F.HTML>

Additional FMD case discovered in S Korea's south eastern region

----------------------------------------------------------------

South Korea confirmed a single case of foot and mouth disease (FMD) on

Saturday [15 Jan 2011] in the country's south eastern region, as nationwide

vaccinations and quarantine efforts have started to help stem new outbreaks.

The additional case in Cheongsong, 285 km [177 miles] southeast of Seoul,

brings the total number of confirmed FMD outbreaks to 119, since animals

started showing symptoms in late November [2010], the Ministry of Food,

Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries said. There have been other confirmed

cases of animal disease outbreak but they are not counted because the

animals were culled before test results were completed.

All 30 animals on the small cattle farm have been ordered destroyed along

with livestock within a 500 meter [547 yard] radius of the site to prevent

further spread of the disease, the ministry said.

The disease, meanwhile, forced Seoul to cull and bury 1.6 million heads of

cattle, pigs, goats and deer with damage estimated to run to around 1.5

trillion won (USD 1.34 billion).

The country had moved to vaccinate a limited number of animals on 25 Dec

2010 after initial quarantine efforts proved inadequate to control the

outbreak that has spread to most parts of the country. Seoul said earlier

in the week that it will vaccinate all livestock across the country,

including those on Jeju Island off the country south western coast which

had not been affected so far.

The country has some 3 million cattle, 10 million pigs and large numbers of

other livestock that will need to receive shots.

In addition to the latest outbreaks that were 1st confirmed on 29 Nov 2010,

the country was hit by the disease in 2000, 2002 and 2 more times early

last year [by 2 different, separately introduced FMD virus strains, one

epizootic caused by serotype A, the later epizootic by serotype O -- which

is similar to the currently circulating strain. - Mod.AS]

--

communicated by:

ProMED-mail

******

[2] Water contamination?

Date: Fri 14 Jan 2011

Source: Circle of Blue [summ., edited]

<http://www.circleofblue.org/waternews/2011/world/foot-and-mouth-disease%E2%80%94will-mass-animal-burials-cause-water-contamination-in-south-korea/>

Foot and mouth disease [FMD] -- will mass animal burials contaminate water

in South Korea?

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

As the virus sweeps South Korea's livestock industry, government officials

have ordered the burial of culled animals. The consequences to groundwater

from the slaughter and burial of so many animals have emerged as a public

concern, heightened by reports of biological contamination.

For instance, The Korea Times reported last week that tap water in a

village in Gyeonggi province was contaminated with blood. The news agency

reported that residents believe the contamination was related to a

livestock slaughter on 31 Dec 2010, when nearly 1000 pigs were buried alive

in response to an outbreak of FMD at a nearby farm.

Typically, animals are killed before disposal, but with the outbreak

spreading so fast, local authorities did not have the slaughterhouse

capacity to follow the rules. Instead, animals within a 500 meter radius of

the infected farm were dumped into a pit 5 meters deep that was lined with

double-folded vinyl. "It's possible that the vinyl could be torn by animals

struggling to survive," a quarantine officer told The Korea Times.

Residents in the village, located in a rural area near the northern city of

Paju, are concerned that the buried animals contaminated their groundwater

supply. It is unclear how many homes were affected and whether the bloody

tap water came from private wells or via a public treatment system.

In an interview with Circle of Blue, a Korean government official confirmed

that a farm drainage creek had been contaminated by the live burial near

the city of Paju. But the same official denied that blood had run through

the taps. The official -- who works at the Ministry of Public

Administration and Security and asked to be left anonymous since he does

not have the authority to speak publicly about the matter -- told Circle of

Blue that groundwater is regularly tested via government mandates and that

drinking water had not been contaminated by the bodily fluids of culled

pigs and cows.

The official said that mass slaughter is the most effective means for

controlling such a large outbreak. He also said that killing and burying

animals on-site is consistent with accepted public health practices.

The Asia-Pacific Business & Technology Report published a similar story

from the Gangwon province -- more than 3 hours away -- where more than 1000

pigs were buried on 4 Jan 2011. According to the report, "blood from the

bodies ran into underground water aquifers which supply local drinking water."

There have been confirmed cases in Gyeonggi, North Gyeongsang, Gangwon,

North and South Chungcheong provinces, as well as the city of Incheon.

Though the bloody tap water is an extraordinary event, groundwater

contamination from animal disposal is not.

Just 3 months ago, a local politician with the opposition party cited a

report in The Korea Times from the Ministry of Environment showing

groundwater sources near animal burial sites have been classified

"undrinkable" due to concentrations of colon bacillus -- a bacteria group

that includes E. coli -- that exceed the legal minimum.

In the United States, regulations for dead animal disposal vary by state.

Some states, like Missouri, suggest incineration, composting, or removal to

an approved landfill as safer methods than on-farm burial.

[byline: Brett Walton, Aubrey Ann and Karl Wasmuth]

--

communicated by:

******

[3] Vaccination plans, regaining FMD-free status

Date: Fri 14 Jan 2011

Source: Yonhapnews [edited]

<http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/business/2011/01/14/24/0501000000AEN20110114004800320F.HTML>

South Korea is seeking to regain its FMD-free country status without

resorting to constant use of vaccines, a senior level government official

said Friday [14 Jan 2011].

Deputy farm minister Lee Sang-kil said in a meeting with reporters that

Seoul's current stance is to swiftly carry out vaccination to stem the

rapid spread of the highly contagious animal disease, but not to give shots

on a regular basis. "Nationwide vaccination efforts are emergency measures

and not something Seoul wants to do permanently," he said.

The official said that while policymakers are not ruling out the use of

additional shots if the FMD virus is not destroyed, such a decision can

only be made after extensive testing is carried out on animals in the

country and consultation with experts.

Once ongoing vaccination efforts take effect and there are no more FMD

cases reported for over 6 months, the country will start taking steps to

regain its FMD-free status from the Paris-based World Organization for

Animal Health (OIE). He stressed, however, that such a step will take time.

"Everything will depend on how thoroughly decontamination efforts are

carried out during the spring and summer months when it is easier to

destroy the animal virus," he said. He predicted the government would

decide what course it must take in September 2011.

Lee said that if livestock tests reveal the virus has not been fully

destroyed, Seoul may have to give additional inoculations that could delay

the country's regaining of its FMD-free status for up to 2 years. Regaining

FMD-free status is important because it affects both export and imports and

overall health of the local livestock industry.

The official said that while South Korea can seek to become an FMD-free

country that uses vaccination from the OIE, like Argentina, there is a need

to carefully examine the cost of such a step. Vaccinating around 3.4

million cattle and 10 million pigs every 5 to 6 months [see comment] can

cost the country up to 100 billion won (USD 89.7 million) per year.

"In hindsight, it would have been cheaper if South Korea opted to vaccinate

animals but there was no way to predict the huge losses caused by the

latest outbreak," the official said. He pointed out that Seoul had no

outbreaks for 8 years after 2002, while those that occurred early last year

cost about 170 billion won.

The country has culled and buried 1.61 million heads of cattle, pigs, goats

and deer since the 1st case was confirmed on 29 Nov 2010. Total losses

incurred are estimated at a minimum of 1 trillion won, with numbers likely

to be higher once a complete tally is taken.

The official added that frontline experts are predicting FMD outbreaks to

come under control in one or 2 weeks, since it usually takes a month for

vaccines to start having an affect. The country started giving limited

shots on 25 Dec 2010 before ordering nationwide vaccinations earlier in the

week.

Quarantine officials, meanwhile, reported no new outbreaks for the day and

said there was a drop in number of suspected cases in recent days. The

country already gave shots to 1.6 million animals in areas that are exposed

to the disease.

--

communicated by:

ProMED-mail rapporteur Marshall

[According to the South Korean media, the quarantine authorities have

imported FMD vaccines from England (where a commercial vaccine is

manufactured in a single facility, at Pirbright) and will import more from

Japan (data on this manufacturing laboratory would help). Information on

the vaccine strains included in the inactivated (killed) vaccines from each

manufacturer, as well as the vaccination scheme prescribed by them for each

species, would be appreciated. Are goats (there are about 270 000 of them

in South Korea, held in more than 20 000 establishments) and deer (about 79

000, held in more than 6000 establishments) to be included in the

vaccination scheme?

Vaccinating all cattle and pigs every 5 to 6 months, as indicated in item 3

above, is probably an ideal scheme but in vaccinated adult animals, a less

frequent re-vaccination policy may be acceptable. The adjuvant used should

also be taken into consideration (oil-adjuvant vaccines may confer a longer

protection and require a less frequent vaccination regime). - Mod.AS]

_______________________________________________

Goats mailing list

Goats@...

http://lists.wsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/goats

Link to comment
Share on other sites

And they want to move Plum Island to the middle of Kansas.......

---

FMD in South Korea

Date:

Sun, 16 Jan 2011 08:11:17 -0600

From:

To:

Goats WSU

Below is the latest posting issued by ProMED that addresses the FMD

outbreak in South Korea.

While this post indicates that the number of new cases may finally be

slowing (due to vaccination), new concerns have developed. Blood in

drinking water (presumably from the buried animals) is now causing

concern.

Also, note that one of the updates provides information on the number

of goats in South Korea. The very valid question is whether the deer

and goats will be vaccinated.

The pertinent excerpt is: "Are goats (there are about 270 000 of them

in South Korea, held in more than 20 000 establishments) and deer

(about 79 000, held in more than 6000 establishments) to be included

in the vaccination scheme?"

And, in case anyone is trying to follow all the information I

forwarded, there was indeed an e-mail title: "FMD in South Korea--Part

9." However, at this time, I have been unable to get get any version

of it to arrive at the WSU List Serv. I apologize if several copies

do show up; however, my guess is that they have been censored (not by

WSU) due to both the author of the opinion piece quoted and the nature

of the comments contained in that piece.-- in NE Texas

Archive Number20110115.0181

Published Date15-JAN-2011

SubjectPRO/AH> Foot & mouth disease - S Korea (04): update, RFI

FOOT AND MOUTH DISEASE - SOUTH KOREA (04): UPDATE, REQUEST FOR INFORMATION

**************************************************************************

A ProMED-mail post

In this update:

[1] Update

[2] Water contamination?

[3] Vaccination plans, regaining FMD-free status

******

[1] Update

Date: Sat 15 Jan 2011

Source: Yonhapnews [edited]

<http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/business/2011/01/15/8/0501000000AEN20110115001600320F.HTML>

Additional FMD case discovered in S Korea's south eastern region

----------------------------------------------------------------

South Korea confirmed a single case of foot and mouth disease (FMD) on

Saturday [15 Jan 2011] in the country's south eastern region, as nationwide

vaccinations and quarantine efforts have started to help stem new outbreaks.

The additional case in Cheongsong, 285 km [177 miles] southeast of Seoul,

brings the total number of confirmed FMD outbreaks to 119, since animals

started showing symptoms in late November [2010], the Ministry of Food,

Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries said. There have been other confirmed

cases of animal disease outbreak but they are not counted because the

animals were culled before test results were completed.

All 30 animals on the small cattle farm have been ordered destroyed along

with livestock within a 500 meter [547 yard] radius of the site to prevent

further spread of the disease, the ministry said.

The disease, meanwhile, forced Seoul to cull and bury 1.6 million heads of

cattle, pigs, goats and deer with damage estimated to run to around 1.5

trillion won (USD 1.34 billion).

The country had moved to vaccinate a limited number of animals on 25 Dec

2010 after initial quarantine efforts proved inadequate to control the

outbreak that has spread to most parts of the country. Seoul said earlier

in the week that it will vaccinate all livestock across the country,

including those on Jeju Island off the country south western coast which

had not been affected so far.

The country has some 3 million cattle, 10 million pigs and large numbers of

other livestock that will need to receive shots.

In addition to the latest outbreaks that were 1st confirmed on 29 Nov 2010,

the country was hit by the disease in 2000, 2002 and 2 more times early

last year [by 2 different, separately introduced FMD virus strains, one

epizootic caused by serotype A, the later epizootic by serotype O -- which

is similar to the currently circulating strain. - Mod.AS]

--

communicated by:

ProMED-mail

******

[2] Water contamination?

Date: Fri 14 Jan 2011

Source: Circle of Blue [summ., edited]

<http://www.circleofblue.org/waternews/2011/world/foot-and-mouth-disease%E2%80%94will-mass-animal-burials-cause-water-contamination-in-south-korea/>

Foot and mouth disease [FMD] -- will mass animal burials contaminate water

in South Korea?

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

As the virus sweeps South Korea's livestock industry, government officials

have ordered the burial of culled animals. The consequences to groundwater

from the slaughter and burial of so many animals have emerged as a public

concern, heightened by reports of biological contamination.

For instance, The Korea Times reported last week that tap water in a

village in Gyeonggi province was contaminated with blood. The news agency

reported that residents believe the contamination was related to a

livestock slaughter on 31 Dec 2010, when nearly 1000 pigs were buried alive

in response to an outbreak of FMD at a nearby farm.

Typically, animals are killed before disposal, but with the outbreak

spreading so fast, local authorities did not have the slaughterhouse

capacity to follow the rules. Instead, animals within a 500 meter radius of

the infected farm were dumped into a pit 5 meters deep that was lined with

double-folded vinyl. "It's possible that the vinyl could be torn by animals

struggling to survive," a quarantine officer told The Korea Times.

Residents in the village, located in a rural area near the northern city of

Paju, are concerned that the buried animals contaminated their groundwater

supply. It is unclear how many homes were affected and whether the bloody

tap water came from private wells or via a public treatment system.

In an interview with Circle of Blue, a Korean government official confirmed

that a farm drainage creek had been contaminated by the live burial near

the city of Paju. But the same official denied that blood had run through

the taps. The official -- who works at the Ministry of Public

Administration and Security and asked to be left anonymous since he does

not have the authority to speak publicly about the matter -- told Circle of

Blue that groundwater is regularly tested via government mandates and that

drinking water had not been contaminated by the bodily fluids of culled

pigs and cows.

The official said that mass slaughter is the most effective means for

controlling such a large outbreak. He also said that killing and burying

animals on-site is consistent with accepted public health practices.

The Asia-Pacific Business & Technology Report published a similar story

from the Gangwon province -- more than 3 hours away -- where more than 1000

pigs were buried on 4 Jan 2011. According to the report, "blood from the

bodies ran into underground water aquifers which supply local drinking water."

There have been confirmed cases in Gyeonggi, North Gyeongsang, Gangwon,

North and South Chungcheong provinces, as well as the city of Incheon.

Though the bloody tap water is an extraordinary event, groundwater

contamination from animal disposal is not.

Just 3 months ago, a local politician with the opposition party cited a

report in The Korea Times from the Ministry of Environment showing

groundwater sources near animal burial sites have been classified

"undrinkable" due to concentrations of colon bacillus -- a bacteria group

that includes E. coli -- that exceed the legal minimum.

In the United States, regulations for dead animal disposal vary by state.

Some states, like Missouri, suggest incineration, composting, or removal to

an approved landfill as safer methods than on-farm burial.

[byline: Brett Walton, Aubrey Ann and Karl Wasmuth]

--

communicated by:

******

[3] Vaccination plans, regaining FMD-free status

Date: Fri 14 Jan 2011

Source: Yonhapnews [edited]

<http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/business/2011/01/14/24/0501000000AEN20110114004800320F.HTML>

South Korea is seeking to regain its FMD-free country status without

resorting to constant use of vaccines, a senior level government official

said Friday [14 Jan 2011].

Deputy farm minister Lee Sang-kil said in a meeting with reporters that

Seoul's current stance is to swiftly carry out vaccination to stem the

rapid spread of the highly contagious animal disease, but not to give shots

on a regular basis. "Nationwide vaccination efforts are emergency measures

and not something Seoul wants to do permanently," he said.

The official said that while policymakers are not ruling out the use of

additional shots if the FMD virus is not destroyed, such a decision can

only be made after extensive testing is carried out on animals in the

country and consultation with experts.

Once ongoing vaccination efforts take effect and there are no more FMD

cases reported for over 6 months, the country will start taking steps to

regain its FMD-free status from the Paris-based World Organization for

Animal Health (OIE). He stressed, however, that such a step will take time.

"Everything will depend on how thoroughly decontamination efforts are

carried out during the spring and summer months when it is easier to

destroy the animal virus," he said. He predicted the government would

decide what course it must take in September 2011.

Lee said that if livestock tests reveal the virus has not been fully

destroyed, Seoul may have to give additional inoculations that could delay

the country's regaining of its FMD-free status for up to 2 years. Regaining

FMD-free status is important because it affects both export and imports and

overall health of the local livestock industry.

The official said that while South Korea can seek to become an FMD-free

country that uses vaccination from the OIE, like Argentina, there is a need

to carefully examine the cost of such a step. Vaccinating around 3.4

million cattle and 10 million pigs every 5 to 6 months [see comment] can

cost the country up to 100 billion won (USD 89.7 million) per year.

"In hindsight, it would have been cheaper if South Korea opted to vaccinate

animals but there was no way to predict the huge losses caused by the

latest outbreak," the official said. He pointed out that Seoul had no

outbreaks for 8 years after 2002, while those that occurred early last year

cost about 170 billion won.

The country has culled and buried 1.61 million heads of cattle, pigs, goats

and deer since the 1st case was confirmed on 29 Nov 2010. Total losses

incurred are estimated at a minimum of 1 trillion won, with numbers likely

to be higher once a complete tally is taken.

The official added that frontline experts are predicting FMD outbreaks to

come under control in one or 2 weeks, since it usually takes a month for

vaccines to start having an affect. The country started giving limited

shots on 25 Dec 2010 before ordering nationwide vaccinations earlier in the

week.

Quarantine officials, meanwhile, reported no new outbreaks for the day and

said there was a drop in number of suspected cases in recent days. The

country already gave shots to 1.6 million animals in areas that are exposed

to the disease.

--

communicated by:

ProMED-mail rapporteur Marshall

[According to the South Korean media, the quarantine authorities have

imported FMD vaccines from England (where a commercial vaccine is

manufactured in a single facility, at Pirbright) and will import more from

Japan (data on this manufacturing laboratory would help). Information on

the vaccine strains included in the inactivated (killed) vaccines from each

manufacturer, as well as the vaccination scheme prescribed by them for each

species, would be appreciated. Are goats (there are about 270 000 of them

in South Korea, held in more than 20 000 establishments) and deer (about 79

000, held in more than 6000 establishments) to be included in the

vaccination scheme?

Vaccinating all cattle and pigs every 5 to 6 months, as indicated in item 3

above, is probably an ideal scheme but in vaccinated adult animals, a less

frequent re-vaccination policy may be acceptable. The adjuvant used should

also be taken into consideration (oil-adjuvant vaccines may confer a longer

protection and require a less frequent vaccination regime). - Mod.AS]

_______________________________________________

Goats mailing list

Goats@...

http://lists.wsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/goats

Link to comment
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