-Caveat Lector-

The Times

 THURSDAY MARCH 01 2001

 Slaughter of the innocuous

 BY ABIGAIL WOOD

 Foot-and-mouth is as serious to animals as a bad cold is to human
 beings. So why the concern?

 Foot-and-mouth has gained a grip on this nation — and fear of the
 disease seems as powerful as the disease itself. We recognise
 foot-and-mouth not by its symptoms, but by what we do to control it:
 the restrictions on movement, the slaughter of animals, the burning of
 carcasses. From the panic and the headlines you would imagine that
 this is a most dreadful disease. Yet foot-and-mouth very rarely kills
 the animals that catch it. They almost always recover, and in a couple
 of weeks at that. It almost never gets passed on to humans and when it
 does it is a mild infection only. The meat from animals that have had
 it is fit to eat. In clinical terms, foot-and-mouth is about as
 serious, to animals or to people, as a bad cold.

 Why, then, the concern? And why the policy of wholesale slaughter? The
 concern, of course, is economic. This is a financial issue, not an
 animal welfare issue, nor a human health one. No one abroad will take
 our meat if it might be infected with foot-and-mouth. And that
 worldwide exclusion zone stems from British policies of the past. It
 was we who, in the late 19th century, decided that foot-and-mouth
 should not be lived with, but should be eliminated, shut out through
 the cordon sanitaire; it was we, in the 1950s, who encouraged first
 the Continent, then the rest of the world, into following suit. Now it
 is we who must live with the results of that policy.

 Foot-and-mouth disease does reduce the productivity of an animal: its
 milk yield, its rate of putting on of flesh. There are no figures for
 how much it reduces these things; part of the reason for that is that
 no one since the 1920s in Britain has seen the disease take its full
 course. Any animal infected with it has been immediately slaughtered
 That reduction in productivity, that fear of small economic loss, is
 what lies behind the elimination policy — and the huge economic costs
 that are now being incurred.

 It need not have been like that. The animal control policy was the
 result of economics rather than biology. Under conditions of world
 trade now it is a decision almost impossible to reverse.

 Foot-and-mouth first appeared in Britain in 1839 from the import of
 live infected animals and later from ships, from dockyards, from
 Argentinian meat and skins, even from foreign hay. For much of the
 19th century it was endemic in the UK — and it did not destroy
 farming. Farmers lived with it, as they live with bad weather, poor
 harvests and other afflictions of their livelihood.

 It was owners of pedigree herds, rather than common-or-garden milk or
 meat producers, who from 1869 prompted efforts to eradicate it. It was
 achieved by isolation, by movement restrictions, by temporary closures
 of markets and by prohibition of live imports — but not by
 slaughtering. By 1900, Britain was disease-free — but was subject to
 waves of re-introductions of foot-and-mouth from the Continent and
 from South American meat. Outbreaks, and now slaughters as well as
 isolations, were frequent; but familiarity made them more of an
 irritant than the terror we have today.

 A policy of living with foot-and-mouth almost became an option again
 in the 1920s. A bad outbreak in Cheshire was on the verge of running
 out of control.Ministry teams were so far behind in their slaughtering
 that on many farms the cows had recovered from the disease before the
 slaughterers arrived. And farmers looked at their now-normal cows in
 bewilderment and asked: “Was that it? Was that rather trivial illness
 what all the fuss was about?” Not surprisingly, they began to question
 the need for slaughter.

 Even the Ministry of Agriculture, now wedded to the policy of
 slaughter, was pressured into taking heed of farmers’ views, and even
 asked them which policy they would prefer, elimination or toleration.
 It even went to a vote. But by that time burnings had got on top of
 the disease, and the vote, though close, was to continue measures of
 eradication.

 This was the last time that people saw the full course of the illness.
 Memories of what a slight disease it was began to fade. The biggest
 outbreak in our history, in 1967-68, is the one that lingers in
 present memories, and memory of those days fuels the grim processes we
 now see.

 A policy of living with foot-and-mouth might have worked in the 1920s,
 and had we adopted it we would not be witness to the present scenes.
 But in those days productivity was not the be-all and end-all that it
 is now. So many diseases were around that a farmer was happy if his
 animals survived to give milk and meat at all. The rate at which they
 gave milk and meat was much less important.

 Today, agri-business is a term that everyone knows, and productivity
 is everything. A slower growth-rate, a lesser yield, is intolerable.
 And with markets being global or nothing at all, a Britain with
 foot-and-mouth would find its meat unexportable and its farmers
 bankrupted.

 It is now too late to consider the option of tolerating the disease.
 So the cows are slaughtered. Our past policy has forced us to this
 pass. That policy evolved in a very different farming world from
 today; historical precedent has informed our current position, but,
 ironically, today’s realities make that position far more justified
 than ever it was when it began.

 The author is a vet and researcher into the history of foot-and-mouth
 for the Wellcome Trust at the University of Manchester.

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