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The Veterinary Record, Vol 141, Issue 8, 187-190
Copyright © 1997 by British Veterinary Association

Risk of BSE from the import of cattle from the United Kingdom into countries of the European Union

B. E. C. Schreuder DVM1, J. W. Wilesmith BVSc, MRCVS2, J. B. M. Ryan BEd, MIBiol2, and O. C. Straub 3

1 Department of Pathobiology and Epidemiology, DLO-Institute for Animal Science and Health (ID-DLO), PO Box 65, 8200 AB Lelystad, The Netherlands
2 Epidemiology Department, Central Veterinary Laboratory, Veterinary Laboratory Agency, New Haw, Addlestone, Surrey KT15 3NB
3 Prof Dr. Federal Research Centre for Virus Diseases of Animals, Tubingen, Germany

This study assesses quantitatively the risk that other countries, in particular those within the European Union, have incurred by importing cattle from the United Kingdom during the period before or shortly after the ban on the import of live breeding stock was introduced in 1989. It does this by assessing the probability that animals imported from the UK in a certain year would have become a detected BSE case, had they not been exported. Using the annual incidence rates available for separate birth cohorts and a given culling rate, a cumulative incidence for each birth cohort was calculated. These figures were then combined with the numbers of live breeding cattle imported from the UK into the other countries of the EU, to give an import-related risk index for each country, assuming that their culling rates were similar to that in Great Britain. The countries could thus be categorised in terms of the number of cases of BSE they might have expected.




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