Call For Stronger Animal Disease Traceability System

US - In response to a statement by Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack on 5 February, the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) is reaffirming its call for a strong, national animal disease traceability programme to help maintain and improve the health of US livestock.
calendar icon 9 February 2010
clock icon 2 minute read

Secretary Vilsack announced that the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) is creating a new strategy for animal disease traceability. This comes in reaction to a public comment period in which the programme in place was heavily criticised for being too stringent.

"The USDA is planning to create a new, national animal disease traceability system that is administered by the states and tribal nations. If each state is allowed to develop and implement its own programme, important questions arise concerning communication and coordination. Clearly, the USDA must create a system that allows for quick and accurate trace-back across state borders in an animal disease emergency, or there is no point in the new system," says Dr Ron DeHaven, chief executive officer of the AVMA. "There are many unanswered questions that must be addressed as this new animal disease traceability programme is being developed. For that reason, the AVMA cannot consider endorsing this concept at this time."

The AVMA advocates creation of an animal disease traceability programme that would allow veterinarians to trace diseased animals back to specific farms or herds in cases of disease outbreaks. This would help identify potentially infected animals, quickly address the disease, and minimise harm other food animals, food producers and the public.

"The government estimates that this new animal traceability programme will take 18 months to two years to create and implement. We are concerned that, in fact, with a formal rule-making process in place, implementation will be delayed for up to three or four years, and, during that time, the US will continue without an animal disease traceability programme," says Dr Larry R. Corry, president of the AVMA.

"Veterinarians are the foot soldiers in the war against livestock diseases, and it's a role that we take extremely seriously," explains Dr Corry. "It's critical that federal regulations on this new traceability programme include input from the AVMA and veterinarians."

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