A2B-Lancastor Farming. Saturday, May 21, 1994 Dairy Calf Study Indicates Need For Management Change HUNTINGDON (Huntingdon Co.) The U.S. Department of Agriculture has announced that a recently completed one-year study indicates that herd management practices may have an impact on the prevalence of the pathogen G. coli 0157:H7 in dairy herds. ‘This finding is valuable and could point to ways to lower the levels of E. coli 0157:H7 in cattle and thus reduce the incidence of food poisoning and related diseas es in humans,” said Patricia Jen sen, acting assistant secretary for marketing and inspection services. Cattle shedtthe E. coli 0157:H7 organism in their feces, which can contaminate the environment and expose other animals. Although cattle carry and shed the bacteria without becoming ill, human ill nesses associated with E. coli 0157:H7 can include bloody diar rhea and hemorrhagic uremic syn drome, a serious kidney disease and the leading cause of acute kid ney failure in children. Sources of human infection vary, but many documented out breaks of disease have been traced to undercooked beef. Humans can become exposed through con suming contaminated undercooked meat, un treated water, unpas teurized milk, or mater ials cross contaminated with these products. Person-to-person trans mission is also an im portant source of sec ondary infections in hu mans. Jensen said the dairy heifer study, conducted by USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, is only one of a number of efforts by the department to improve the safety of meat and poultry products. “Over the past year,” she said, “we have ini tiated a strategic patho gen reduction program that aims to reduce mi crobial contamination from the farm to the ta ble.” The study that APHIS conducted through its National Animal Health Monitoring System fol lowed newborn calves to the weaning stage. The study included 1,811 dairy operations in 28 states, Fecal sam ples collected from about 7,000 preweaned calves from more than 1,000 dairy operations were tested for presence of the pathogen. Samples from 25 of these calves from 19 farms in 16 states tested positive for the organ ism, for a prevalence of 3.6 per 1,000 calves. Farms with positive test results were spread across the country, and no regional or seasonal clustering was found. The project next con ducted a follow-up stu dy on 64 of the study herds to look at shed ding patterns (expelling the organism in feces) in infected herds and to de termine management factors that might be as sociated with infection. An increase in prevalence was identified at eight weeks of age, the average age at which calves were weaned. Weaned calves were three times more likely to test positive than nursing calves. The study found that if calves were grouped before weaning, the herd was nine times more likely to test positive, than if they were grouped after weaning. This indi cates that grouping calves before weaning may increase transmis sion of E. coli to other calves or precipitate shedding of the patho gen in calves already carrying it in their systems. . Jensen said USDA’s food safe ly emphasis last year was on en forcement and on developing a science-based inspection system. She said food safety improve ments have included special unan nounced reviews of meat and poultry plants, which resulted in temporarily stopping activities at several plants; mandating and im proving training on zero tolerance for fecal matter on beef carcasses; increased research from the farm to the table to develop methods to detect and destroy pathogens, as well as new inspection methods based on sound science; rapid bac teria lest research: and the hiring TOP DRY GRAIN BINS • Dry up to 1000 Bu. 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