Source: http://iowapublicradio.org/post/usda...rtable-disease
3:13 pm
Fri April 18, 2014
USDA makes PED a reportable disease
By Amy Mayer
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has announced that hog farmers are now required to report outbreaks of certain viral diseases that have spread across the country during the past year.
Until now, two strains of the porcine epidemic diarrhea virus and swine delta coronavirus, which is similar to PED but not as lethal, had not been considered reportable diseases. That?s partly because they do not pose any food safety or human health threat. But the rapid spread of PED, in particular, has led to huge losses in the pork supply because the disease can wipe out entire litters of piglets.
The USDA hopes that the new information will help quell the spread of the virus. But Iowa State University veterinarian Rodney Baker says the reporting requirement may be too little too late.
?Reporting itself doesn?t help us with the disease at all,? Baker said, ?unless there?s some action taken through the reporting process that prevents the spread of the disease.?
Baker says it?s not yet clear whether the department will take further action. But he recognizes that mandatory reporting is an important step...
3:13 pm
Fri April 18, 2014
USDA makes PED a reportable disease
By Amy Mayer
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has announced that hog farmers are now required to report outbreaks of certain viral diseases that have spread across the country during the past year.
Until now, two strains of the porcine epidemic diarrhea virus and swine delta coronavirus, which is similar to PED but not as lethal, had not been considered reportable diseases. That?s partly because they do not pose any food safety or human health threat. But the rapid spread of PED, in particular, has led to huge losses in the pork supply because the disease can wipe out entire litters of piglets.
The USDA hopes that the new information will help quell the spread of the virus. But Iowa State University veterinarian Rodney Baker says the reporting requirement may be too little too late.
?Reporting itself doesn?t help us with the disease at all,? Baker said, ?unless there?s some action taken through the reporting process that prevents the spread of the disease.?
Baker says it?s not yet clear whether the department will take further action. But he recognizes that mandatory reporting is an important step...