Representational Image 
World

UK identifies case of 'mad cow' disease

British Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) said this week that a cow that died of the disease had been removed from a farm in Somerset, southwest England, adding there was "no risk to food safety".

AFP

LONDON: British officials have identified a single case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), commonly known as mad cow disease.

The Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) said this week that the dead animal had been removed from a farm in Somerset, southwest England, adding there was "no risk to food safety".

"The UK's overall risk status for BSE remains at 'controlled' and there is no risk to food safety or public health," said Chief Veterinary Officer Christine Middlemiss.

APHA will launch a "thorough investigation of the herd, the premises, potential sources of infection and will produce a full report on the incident in due course".

Five cases of BSE, which was linked to fatal human condition Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans, have been identified in Britain since 2014.

Britain culled millions of cows during an epidemic of the disease in the 1990s.

Rubio meets PM Modi in Delhi, calls India ‘cornerstone’ of Indo-Pacific strategy, shares White House invite

Iran and US are close to an understanding aimed at ending the war, officials say

Twisha Sharma death case: Husband sent to 7-day police remand; AIIMS-Delhi team to conduct second autopsy on Sunday

WFI policy 'exclusionary': Delhi HC lets Vinesh Phogat appear for Asian Games selections trials

Cockroach Janta Party surge shows public distress: Prashant Kishor

SCROLL FOR NEXT