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Tainted pet food now in human food supply

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From Prescription Drug Info News.

http://www.PrescriptionDrug-Info.com/Email/Archive/2007-04-26.htm

 

 

 

By ANDREW BRIDGES, Associated Press Writer Thu Apr 26, 5:36 PM ET

 

WASHINGTON - Several hundred of the 6,000 hogs that may have eaten contaminated

pet food are believed to have entered the food supply for humans, the government

said Thursday. The potential risk to human health was said to be very low.

 

The government told the three states involved it would not allow meat from any

of the hogs that ate the feed to enter the food supply.

No more than 345 hogs from farms in California, New York and South Carolina are

involved, according to the Agriculture Department. It appears the large majority

of the hogs that may have been exposed are still on the farms where they are

being raised, spokeswoman Nicol Andrews said.

 

Salvaged pet food from companies known or suspected of using a tainted

ingredient was shipped to hog farms in seven states for use as feed.

 

The government will compensate farmers if they kill those hogs, said Kenneth

Peterson of department's Food Safety and Inspection Service. The department knew

of no countries moving to suspend imports of U.S. pork products.

 

Also, a poultry feed mill in an eighth state, Missouri, also received possibly

contaminated pet food scraps left over from production. The fate of the feed

made from that waste was under investigation.

 

The pet food sent to the farms later was discovered to have an ingredient, rice

protein concentrate, imported from China that was tainted by an industrial

chemical, melamine. Testing also revealed other related and similarly banned

compounds, including cyanuric acid.

 

Food and Drug Administration inspectors were preparing to visit China as part of

the agency's investigation.

 

Melamine is not considered a human health concern. But there is no scientific

data on the health effects of melamine combined with the other compounds, said

David Elder, director of enforcement for the FDA.

 

Still, the FDA and Agriculture Department believe the likelihood of someone

becoming ill after eating pork from hogs fed contaminated feed is very low.

Meanwhile, the University of California, Davis, is developing a test to measure

melamine levels in tissue, Andrews said.

 

Since mid-March, pet food companies have recalled more than 100 brands of dog

and cat food and treats; more recalls were announced Thursday. An unknown number

of cats and dogs have fallen ill or died after eating products made with

contaminated rice protein concentrate or a second tainted ingredient, wheat

gluten.

 

Some pet food, while unsuitable for sale for that purpose, was still considered

safe for animals to eat as it had not been recalled at the time it was forwarded

to hog farms. Its use at hog farms raised the possibility that melamine entered

the human food supply.

 

The department on Thursday released the following state-by-state breakdown of

its investigation into farms thought to have received the contaminated pet food

for use as hog feed. The farms were not identified.

 

_CALIFORNIA: State officials are working to contact the purchasers of 50 whole

hogs raised on a single farm.

 

_NEW YORK: A breeder farm's 125 to 140 swine are under quarantine pending the

results of urine and manure tests. None of the hogs went to slaughter.

 

_SOUTH CAROLINA: Urine tests done on some of the 800 hogs now quarantined at a

farm have tested positive for low levels of melamine. None went to slaughter.

According to the state veterinarian, none of the suspect feed was fed to the

hogs. Federal tests on the feed have come up negative. The positive urine tests

could not be immediately explained, although contaminated feed could have

escaped detection during tests, the FDA said.

 

_NORTH CAROLINA: A farm with 1,400 hogs is under quarantine. It shipped 54

animals to a slaughterhouse, where they are on voluntary hold.

 

_UTAH: Eight hogs sent to slaughter by one farm remain on hold. Also on hold are

3,300 hogs at a second farm, as well as 40 to 50 carcasses at a slaughterhouse

supplied by that producer. Meat from no more than 100 other hogs from the

producer, all processed earlier by that same plant, may have entered the food

supply, Andrews said.

 

_KANSAS: Meat from 195 hogs from a single producer may have entered the food

supply via a Nebraska slaughterhouse. The farm is holding another 150 hogs.

 

_OKLAHOMA: A show hog operation purchased contaminated feed but no hogs have

gone to slaughter.

 

In addition, an Ohio hog farm has been cleared.

 

Each year, about 105 million hogs are slaughtered and processed in the United

States.

 

http://news./s/ap/20070426/ap_on_he_me/food_contamination

 

 

 

 

 

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