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Got a craving for a fast food burger???
Before you rush out for that BigMac or Double Whopper with cheese, you might want to know about Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (mad cows disease). We don't hear much about it here in the states, but BSE is big news in Europe. During my recent trip to Germany, I noticed BSE was front page news almost every day. It's a big problem.
BSE turns your brain into swiss cheese. What??? You can find out more about this wonderful disease caused by mutant proteins at the BSE site (above).
For the record, I eat meat, but I don't do fast food - except, of course, burritos. I'm also fortunate enough to live in an area where I know what I'm getting from the local meat market. BSE and it's relatives have, however, heightened my awareness of yet another global problem...
I'm reprinting the article below because it makes (I think) an important statement about meat and human survival into the 21st century.
Bovine spongiform encephalopathy: its wider meaning for population health
Worldwide intensive meat production is unsustainable. Evidence from Britain that
the agent causing bovine spongiform encephalopathy in cattle may cause
neurological disease in beef eaters(1) and the consequent turmoil in the beef
trade have made compelling headline news across Europe. The ecological dimensions
to this public drama have, however, even wider implications for population
health.
Three issues warrant discussion. Firstly, although the infective agent of
bovine spongiform encephalopathy and its effects may seem exotic, this episode
merely extends the long running narrative whereby changes in human culture induce
new infectious diseases. Secondly, the method of cattle feeding implicated in the
transmission of bovine spongiform encephalopathy seems partly to have arisen
because of supply-demand pressures in the world food production system. Thirdly,
the scare about bovine spongiform encephalopathy is the tip of a much larger
iceberg of adverse environmental and health consequences of the mass production
and consumption of meat.
Firstly, incredulity that the mysterious transmissible agent responsible for bovine spongiform encephalopathy might "jump species" and
infect humans is misplaced. Microbes and their ilk are no less opportunistic than
any other species and are capable of rapid genetic adaptation.(2) We humans have
improved our survival prospects by widening the range of other species on which
we feed. Bacteria and multicellular parasites do likewise, as do the viruses and
prions that parasitise the intracellular molecular processes of animals and
plants. Ever since humans made intimate contact with other animal species - by
intruding on their habitats, eating them, or domesticating them - mutant strains
of zoonotic agents have opportunistically become infectious agents in
humans.(3)(4) Thus have we acquired smallpox from cattle, measles from ungulates
or dogs. influenza from pigs, HIV from monkeys, and so on.
This endless narrative is a condition of life on earth: it is simply anthropocentrism that sees many
tiny species as "pests and diseases" because they share our food supplies or
parasitise us. Modern intensive methods of agriculture, animal husbandry, and
aquaculture have opened up vast new ecological opportunities for microbes.(4)(5)
Hence it would be surprising if transmission of the type that we think may be
happening with bovine spongiform encephalopathy and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease did
not occur.(6) Recent sequencing of the prion protein in vertebrates indicates an
evolutionary connection between the forms in cattle and in humans.(7)
Secondly,
modern methods of intensive farming reflect increasingly the tension between food
supply and demand. As populations have increased in size and affluence, so the
demand for food has grown, particularly for foods such as meat that are seen as
high quality. The expectation of cheap meat, helped by competition between
supermarkets and government subsidy, is spreading throughout the world's middle
classes. The resulting intensification in meat production requires heightened
inputs of energy, chemicals, water, and protein feed.(8)
The use of protein
derived from ruminants for cattle feed increased in the early l98Os, as world
prices escalated for the then prevailing protein supplements, fishmeal and
soybeans. The price rises reflected faltering growth in per capita production of
those foods, after three decades of strong growth.(9)(10) The per capita
production of soybeans tripled between 1950 and 1980 while the per capita fish
catch doubled between 1950 and 1970, but neither has increased further since
those peaks. From the 1980s the growth in production of these and several other
foods seems to have fallen behind the growth in world population.(10)(11) We
must therefore ask of our recent methods of food production: to what extent have
we been depending on unsustainable resource inputs? And of the future: can we
sufficiently boost production with genetically engineered plant, animal, and
marine foods? The answers bear strongly on the long term prospects for human
health.
Thirdly, beef production is a very environmentally damaging form of meat
production.(8) If we are adequately and equitably to feed a world of 10 billion
people next century, compared with today's 5.7 billion, then beef-eating
Westerners cannot expect to continue dining at an elite high table. There is
insufficient land and protein supplement (whether as cereal, fish, or mammalian
scraps) to enable a beef enriched global diet. The supplies of fossil fuel energy
and water required for intensive livestock production are huge. So is the demand
for forests to be denuded to create pastoral land in Central America to produce
lean beef for McDonald's burgers.(12) A unit of beef energy produced in western
(and, increasingly, east Asian) factory farms requires an input of around 6-7
units of cereal grain energy.(8) Smil argues that "diets high in meat are a very
recent aberration unsustainable on a global scale."(11)
Epidemiological studies
indicate that vegetarians live a little longer than meat eaters.(13)(14) We
should therefore expect that a world diet of modest meat content would bring
widespread gains in human health - both directly and by averting the adverse
social and environmental consequences of intensive meat production.(14)
These
complex ecological issues portend far reaching and challenging policy decisions.
Currently, however, we are preoccupied with the unsettling risks to public health
from British beef already eaten. And in the political arena the findings of the
parliamentary Joint Agriculture and Health Select Committee seem unlikely to go
beyond the puny immediacies of economic and political face saving. We thus risk
overlooking the wider ecological and public health implications of our mass
produced, meat enriched diet. For over one hundred millennia food supplies and,
more recently, food production methods have been central to the ecological
sustainability of human societies. In the coming millennium we will need to think
even more in those terms.
A J MCMICHAEL
Professor of epidemiology
Department of Epidemiology and Population
Sciences,
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine,
London WC1 E 7HT
- REFERENCES
- 1. Will R G, Ironside J W, Zeidler M, Cousens S N, Estibeiro K, Alperovitch A, et
al. A new variant of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in the UK. Lancet 1996;347:921-5
- 2. Wilson M E. Infectious disease: an ecological perspective BMJ 1995;311:1681-4
- 3. McNeill W H. Plagues and peoples. New York: Anchor Press/Doubleday, 1976.
- 4. Karlen A. Plague's progress. A social history of disease. London:Gollancz, 1995.
- 5. McMichael A J. Planetary overload. Global environmental change and the health
of the humans species. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993.
- 6. Levins R.
Preparing for uncertainty. Ecosystem Health 1995;1:47-57.
- 7. Krakauer D C, Pagel
M, Southwood T R E, Zanotto P Md A. Pylogenesis of prion protein. Nature
1996;380:675.
- 8. Rifkin J. Beyond beef. New York: Dutton, 1992.
- 9. Brown L R, Kane
H, Ayres E. Vital signs. The trends that are shaping our future. London:
Earthscan, 1994.
- 10. Food and Agriculture Organisation. State of the world's
fisheries 1995. Rome:FAO, 1995.
- 11. Smil V. How many people can the earth feed?
Population and Development Review 1994;20:255-92.
- 12. McMichael P D, ed. The
global restructuring of agro-food systems. Ithaca: Cornell University Press,
1994.
- 13. Thorogood M, Mann J, Appleby P, McPherson K. Risk of death from cancer
and ischaemic heart disease in meat and non-meat eaters. BMJ 1994;308:1667-70.
- 14. McMichael A J. Vegetarians and longevity: imagining a wider reference population.
Epidemiology 1992;3:389-91.
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The Mad Cow says: I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take it anymore!5,000,000 cows can't be wrong !
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